Tuesday, August 14, 2007
Aluminum Extruder Sneak Peek
If you've followed along in the forums, you know that we have someone CNCing us 10 extruder kits from aluminum. They should be finished shortly, which is very exciting. It will be a big step for the project as a whole to double the number of RepRap extruders that are 'in the wild'.
In the pictures here, I'm assembling a prototype of the extruder. The finished version will only be slightly different, if at all. This extruder feels very strong, and I think once we get these into the hands of some very capable reprappers, we will see some very good, and very exciting results come about.
More pics on Flickr.
In the pictures here, I'm assembling a prototype of the extruder. The finished version will only be slightly different, if at all. This extruder feels very strong, and I think once we get these into the hands of some very capable reprappers, we will see some very good, and very exciting results come about.
More pics on Flickr.
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Great news! Could someone remind me if these are going to come with the hardware to assemble the extruder as well? That would be really convenient.
Kyle
Kyle
Off topic, but no, I can, however, point you to three other fiction sources where the "gray goo" is a menace.
...Last I checked we've already got grey goo that will double itself every 20 minutes given usable material and energy.
That's pretty thoroughly amazing.
It also isn't an unstoppable world-devouring menace. Except, perhaps for that whole thing where it did devour this world, and became.. well.. us. It won't devour our world again, at least.
I'll be mightily impressed if human engineering manages to outdo that feat sufficiently that the grey goo that's already here is beaten. We might, however, manage something that'll make this tech we've got a little more like the grey goo we've been using for milennia.
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That's pretty thoroughly amazing.
It also isn't an unstoppable world-devouring menace. Except, perhaps for that whole thing where it did devour this world, and became.. well.. us. It won't devour our world again, at least.
I'll be mightily impressed if human engineering manages to outdo that feat sufficiently that the grey goo that's already here is beaten. We might, however, manage something that'll make this tech we've got a little more like the grey goo we've been using for milennia.
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