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Generally the first thing that people try printing on their new 3D printer are cool toys like Yoda heads, Portal Companion Cubes, and the Starship Enterprise. Yet 3D printers, even those limited to printing with plastics like acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) and polylactic acid (PLA), can print all sorts of practical items. I scoured MakerBot’s Thingiverse archive of 3D printing files and selected a number of useful yet interesting projects. We offer here some 3D printer projects of objects that will be more than just cool eye candy.
The Thingiverse is an archive of 3D printing projects and files, most of them uploaded by their makers for public use under a Creative Commons license. The archive contains thousands of projects, in categories including 3D Printing, Art, Gadgets, Tools, Household, Fashion, Hobby, Learning, Models, and Toys & Games. Other similar archives exist, but the Thingiverse is the best known.
Many of the items I selected are things that I might not think to shop for, but are useful nonetheless. The acid test is actually printing them out, and we used a MakerBot Replicator 2X to do so. I discarded all those that were duds, leaving the projects you see here. Even among the successful ones, not all of them printed perfectly; if there were problems in printing or with the finished product, I’ve noted them in the captions.
In choosing the projects featured here, I’ve stuck to relatively simple objects, with no more than three parts. I avoided cups and other food-related projects because they can’t be guaranteed as food-safe, though in many cases they probably are. PLA plastic is food safe, though other plastics and potentially toxic materials may have been through the extruder, and the dye that colors the plastic isn’t necessarily safe.
These are but a tiny selection of the practical 3D printing projects available on the Thingiverse. Let us know what other awesome things you want to see printed in 3D in the comments below.
If You Must Have Yoda Heads…
A final word on Yoda heads. At PC Labs, we’ve printed our share—mind you, for testing purposes. Seriously. How well a 3D printer does in rendering Yoda’s wrinkly contours is one of our tests of resolution and print quality. Even for more typical users, there are some utilitarian Yoda-related 3D printing projects out there. If you can’t live without a Yoda cookie cutter, cufflinks, shot glass, or iPhone case, however, you’ll have to search the Thingiverse for them yourself.
1. Ben Heck’s Chip Clip
2. Tweezers
3. Hair Comb
4. iPhone 5/5S Case
5. Stackable Square Tray
6. Desktop Organizer
7. Nintendo 3DS Game Card Box
8. Mini GoPro Stand
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Source link : https://www.pcmag.com/news/8-simple-practical-3d-printer-projects