Printing 3D Toys with Fabr, home-made 3d-printer

Thursday, June 5, 2008

It is great to discover that more and more people people are inventing unique applications of 3D printing technology. For example, a certain Lou Amadio writes in his blog that he wishes and deserves to print toys for his son who is four years old, or at least recreate replacement components for those toys inevitably broken or eaten by kid. But his approach promises to become much more extreme then you might consider: he's not only going to print the toys, he's creating his own specialized 3D printer to do it with! By following the RepRap project he has designed the Fabr. instead According to Lou's blog post.Just before my son’s 4th birthday, my wife and I purged some of his toys. We looked for things he didn’t play with any more, stuff our younger son wasn’t interested in, broken toys, and toys with missing parts. The amount of stuff we found was staggering. What we could - we donated; what we couldn’t donate we removed non-recyclable parts and recycled the rest - but we still ended up with lots of stuff that went right into the landfill. There has got to be a better way. With the recent spat of recalls related to lead or dangerous products, I wanted to be more aware of the life cycle of the toys my kids play with. What if you could make your own toys? And have the ability to directly recycle them into new toys when the children get bored or break them? What if you could share your toy designs with a community? These thoughts have driven me to start designing and building my own 3D printer. I’ve been following the RepRap dev team with enthusiasm, but wanted to take a slightly different approach to the problem. The RepRap’s goal is to achieve self replication - but in order to build your own RepRap, at the moment you need access to a real 3d printer.I designed Fabr as a 3D printer which uses commonly available parts, requires minimal part fabrication, is highly accurate, and has enough power to not only extrude plastic, but can be used to mill metal (metal casting), wood or plastic.Here are some of Fabr’s key components: 80/20 extruded aluminum Bars and Fasteners (purchased from the 80/20 Garage Sale on eBay) Anti-backlash nuts and drive Couplers from Dumpster CNC from Jameco Screws, bearings, and aluminum bars from McMaster-Carr Timing belts, and Pulleys from SmallParts A custom stepper motor controller board based on EasyDriver3 Interfaces with Sketchup

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