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    Adventures in 3D printing Sketchup models

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved SketchUp for 3D Printing
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    • olisheaO Offline
      olishea
      last edited by

      @cotty said:

      A little octahedron ceramic vase modeled with the Artisan plugin.

      Hey cotty,

      When you sent the model away for printing, did the STL preview look all faceted?

      I ask because I was going to 3D print a ceramic stand, it looks smooth as hell in the sketchup model. But when I saw the preview from i.materialise, it looked all faceted, like it needs another couple iterations of subsmooth. I had to ditch the project until I get used to another program, shame because it was a contract with a big company in the UK.

      With it being ceramic, are these facets actually noticeable?

      I was under the impression the only way I could solve it is by using a solid modeller, like MOI 3D....but your model looks all nice and smooth, even though it has less polygons than mine below. I didn't order a sample because I need to print over a 1000 of these, I just need to get it right.

      Here is the preview they sent me....see the facets?

      (I know part of the structure is unsupported where the arrow points, I have actually resolved this now)


      Screen Shot 2014-05-14 at 16.05.47.png

      oli

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      • cottyC Offline
        cotty
        last edited by

        Here's the preview from shapeways, it looks faceted too.
        In fact, I think the process will not allow faceted faces even if you want it that way because of the glazed surface. The face is much smoother than expected.

        shapeway_vase.jpg

        my SketchUp gallery

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        • soloS Offline
          solo
          last edited by

          These are cool and all but what are the costs of a model? Can you tell me from above examples how much they cost in materials and time it took to make?

          http://www.solos-art.com

          If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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          • cottyC Offline
            cotty
            last edited by

            @solo said:

            These are cool and all but what are the costs of a model? Can you tell me from above examples how much they cost in materials and time it took to make?

            The delivery time depends on the material, in my experience: from a few days to 3 weeks.

            Price preview for the vase model:

            vase_costs.jpg

            my SketchUp gallery

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            • cottyC Offline
              cotty
              last edited by

              A holder of our plissés was repeatedly broken, now it is replaced...
              (Alumide: ca. 2 Euro, Steel ca. 8 Euro)

              clip.jpg

              my SketchUp gallery

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              • olisheaO Offline
                olishea
                last edited by

                Solo, they offer discount for bulk orders too.

                Thanks cotty, that really confirmed my suspicions. Guess I was stressing out over nothing! haha

                oli

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                • soloS Offline
                  solo
                  last edited by

                  What I really want to know is the price if you have your own machine, I'm contemplating buying one, but do not know which one or what material yet.

                  http://www.solos-art.com

                  If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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                  • D Offline
                    d12dozr
                    last edited by

                    Pete, a part made on a home printer will cost roughly 1-5% of a professionally printed part, but you also have a lot more work involved and will get a much lower quality product.

                    This cabin was printed on a pro printer (Full Color Sandstone from Shapeways) for ~$150:

                    http://i.imgur.com/1IdPoEE.jpg

                    Full Photo Album

                    The same cabin printed in ABS plastic on my home printer for $2.25, not including the 3 failed prints - and the model doesn't look nearly as good.

                    http://i.imgur.com/WlKKqpD.jpg

                    Full Photo Album

                    If I knew how to operate the printer better, I could get better prints. I've had it for 6 months now, and have had 1 major problem where I had to tear apart the extruder to clean out jammed filament, and several smaller problems that took a few hours of troubleshooting to correct. Home 3D printers are NOT plug and play yet, and it really depends on your needs and skill level if you want to buy a printer.

                    An analogy of using a print service vs your own printer would be sending a Sketchup model to a professional render guy and getting back a nice polished render made with Thea, vs. trying to figure out how to use Kerkythea on your own with no prior knowledge of rendering.

                    3D Printing with SketchUp Book
                    http://goo.gl/f7ooYh

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                    • olisheaO Offline
                      olishea
                      last edited by

                      Carsten, I bet you just look for broken components in your home so you can print a replacement! haha great work!

                      oli

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                      • cottyC Offline
                        cotty
                        last edited by

                        @olishea said:

                        Carsten, I bet you just look for broken components in your home so you can print a replacement! haha great work!

                        It's that obvious? 😎

                        my SketchUp gallery

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                        • D Offline
                          d12dozr
                          last edited by

                          3D Printing is for - Jewelry!

                          These are pieces that I designed in Sketchup, printed via Shapeways and i.materilise, and sell to medical professionals online. The parts are not 3D printed directly, but rather a wax model is 3D printed, then placed in a plaster mold, and finished using lost-wax casting and hand polishing of the parts. The best thing is that the print services take care of all the work, sending my customers or myself the perfect finished part.

                          The pendants sell from $69 for the smallest silver one to $450 for the big gold pendant.

                          Sterling Silver

                          http://i.imgur.com/YuBrUes.jpg

                          Solid 14K Gold

                          https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2912/13989800600_446617d3ea_b.jpg

                          Solid 14K Gold

                          http://i.imgur.com/r33eXKu.jpg

                          Solid 14K Gold

                          http://i.imgur.com/478f3sV.jpg

                          Sterling Silver

                          http://i.imgur.com/gPsBgfD.jpg

                          3D Printing with SketchUp Book
                          http://goo.gl/f7ooYh

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                          • olisheaO Offline
                            olishea
                            last edited by

                            WOW!!! do you sell the chains too? They really don't look like they've been printed at all....I know they've been cast from a print but they are sooooo smooth! 👍

                            oli

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                            • D Offline
                              d12dozr
                              last edited by

                              I was seriously impressed with that big 14K gold pendant. Shapeways just started offering gold a month ago, and that was the first thing I ordered. They sent it out in that nice case (for free!), which is a really nice bonus. I had it in hand in just 7 business days!

                              I don't sell the chains, but have been thinking to add them. It's one more thing to have on hand and keep track of, but it may well be worth it.

                              3D Printing with SketchUp Book
                              http://goo.gl/f7ooYh

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                              • D Offline
                                d12dozr
                                last edited by

                                @solo said:

                                What I really want to know is the price if you have your own machine, I'm contemplating buying one, but do not know which one or what material yet.

                                Pete, the best way to get a feel for these printers is to see one in person. There are local makerspaces in nearly all major cities that will let you come and take a look for free, or pay a monthly fee join to use the tools.

                                I looked up one in Dallas called the Dallas Makerspace: http://dallasmakerspace.org/

                                From their calendar, they have an Open House every Thursday night where you can pop in, get a tour, and ask questions. I have found the folks that frequent makerspaces are very receptive to questions and helping others get started in 3D printing and other useful skills. They can help you understand the different kinds of 3D printers and help you choose one that'll work for you.

                                For anyone else wanting to learn more about 3D printing, finding a makerspace (also called hackerspace) to see a printer in action and ask the regulars questions is an excellent way to get started. Here are a few ways to find groups with 3D printers:

                                • Makerspace Directory
                                • Hackerspace Directory
                                • Meetup groups

                                3D Printing with SketchUp Book
                                http://goo.gl/f7ooYh

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                                • olisheaO Offline
                                  olishea
                                  last edited by

                                  Sending off a model to i.materialise today. Let's see how it works out! I was up literally all night, when I sleep I'll be dreaming in quads! 😆

                                  Quick question. For price comparison I'm also sending model to shapeways. It has to be in STL format and I'm using meshlab to export. So I'm exporting as Collada, importing into meshlab and exporting STL.

                                  Problem is, my model is coming out tiny, significantly smaller than it should be. Any ideas what I'm doing wrong?

                                  [edit] found a STL plugin which works fine, still can't think why the other method didn't though, even though I specified model units.

                                  oli

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                                  • D Offline
                                    d12dozr
                                    last edited by

                                    I'm guessing model units are getting mixed up in the process. Do you know about the STL exporter? If you use that, it's just one step and there shouldn't be any trouble! Protip - you can ZIP the file before uploading to speed the process.

                                    3D Printing with SketchUp Book
                                    http://goo.gl/f7ooYh

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                                    • olisheaO Offline
                                      olishea
                                      last edited by

                                      That plugin didnt work for me on mac, version 8 sketchup. The created files contain no geometry and I've tried changing every option.

                                      I used this one instead, worked first time. So easy!!

                                      Link Preview Image
                                      SketchUp to STL Plugin with No Dialogs | Project Blog

                                      favicon

                                      (brettbeauregard.com)

                                      oli

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                                      • D Offline
                                        d12dozr
                                        last edited by

                                        Nice find!

                                        3D Printing with SketchUp Book
                                        http://goo.gl/f7ooYh

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                                        • N Offline
                                          notareal
                                          last edited by

                                          @cotty said:

                                          ...
                                          [attachment=0:cghve6e2]<!-- ia0 -->vase_costs.jpg<!-- ia0 -->[/attachment:cghve6e2]

                                          btw if some one is planning to print custom lego parts, "coral red strong & flexible" is rather close to lego red 😉

                                          Welcome to try [Thea Render](http://www.thearender.com/), Thea support | [kerkythea.net](http://www.kerkythea.net/) -team member

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                                          • O Offline
                                            otb designworks
                                            last edited by

                                            I got to work with metal printing company for a few years.

                                            My workflow is pretty much exactly how you guys do it; my Su models are often times 20 or more versions all 100', 200', 300' from origin.

                                            I have used SU, Cheetah, and Zbrush all to great effect. Honestly, both of those softwares are inherently "better" than Su for making models for printing. Cheetah uses a modifier stack system which makes editing almost pleasant. Z brush is badass in many aspects (displacement painting with alpha masks, realtime multiple customizable symmetry operations, what?!) but it is a completely different flow than a 3D modeler.

                                            That said, I still use SU the most, mostly because I am faster in it than anything else. Oftentimes, I make the base model in Su, then into Cheetah or Zbrush for sculpting, SubD, etc. And anything architectural was SU and then Z brush for surface sculpting (choosing a stone image and then using it to paint displacement onto a base mesh and then cranking the polygons to 200 mil for final blending and detailing sure is mind blowing and makes you hate SU for what it isn't and can't do.

                                            The stainless steel/bronze had a precision of .007". I settled on a 1/8"=10' printing vs modeling scale.

                                            Here is a video I put together showing some of the renders I did during design development:


                                            dhow_wdish2.jpg


                                            040108_3d_model_0005.jpg


                                            10938_199851422164_66356792164_4503565_5961532_n.jpg


                                            4666_109905887164_66356792164_3166780_768590_n.jpg


                                            n66356792164_2616736_7981.jpg

                                            Cheers, Chuck

                                            OTB Designworks is on Youtube

                                            6 core nMP, 32 gig RAM, (2) D700 GPU's, dual monitors

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