Printing plates for Mr. Maker by ErikJDurwoodII
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Published on September 19, 2011
Derived from
R. Maker - Mark I
by ErikJDurwoodII
Description
I like ErikJDurwoodII's Mr. Maker, but I hate printing parts one-by-one.
Yay printing plates!
Also, I had trouble getting OpenSCAD to render "Bot_Spool1.stl" so I fixed it up a bit and re-saved it.
Yay printing plates!
Also, I had trouble getting OpenSCAD to render "Bot_Spool1.stl" so I fixed it up a bit and re-saved it.
Instructions
1. Print all 5 plates.
2. These plates include 4 extra of the smaller parts (in case they break)
3. Assemble per thingiverse.com/image:73602
4. ???
5. Profits!
2. These plates include 4 extra of the smaller parts (in case they break)
3. Assemble per thingiverse.com/image:73602
4. ???
5. Profits!
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License
Printing plates for Mr. Maker by ErikJDurwoodII by MakerBlock is licensed under the Attribution - Creative Commons license.

Huzzah! and THANKS! How did you arrange then in a single file? I have the software to do it, but it seems more manual of a task than I'd bet it is... ReplicatorG? OpenSCAD? Super, crazy, ninja scripty code-foo?
No, thank YOU for such a cute little guy! I used OpenSCAD and included the file below. The basic OpenSCAD functions for moving and rotating parts actually made it pretty easy.
I had written a tutorial on making printing plates a few months ago. But, basically, I just separate out the parts that are duplicated from the unique, put the biggest pieces on plates, and arrange the duplicate pieces around them or on their own plate.
www.makerbot.com/blog/2011/06/...
plates/
My guess would be OpenSCAD. :)