Since people wanted to see how it turned out. This is a 330x330 object that covers the entire purported print area of my machine.
I’m ashamed to admit that I undershot my filament usage calculation slightly, and I chickened out just before the finish line. I didn’t have any more white in stock, so I switched to some grey of the same type from the same manufacturer by doing a mid-air refuel, shoving the end of the new spool in chasing behind the very tail of the old one. I don’t think it looks too bad. I may just spraypaint the entire thing white later anyhow. I wanted to use a light color in order to more easily spot and keep track of screws and springs and such.


Wow, now i would really like to try a 256 mm³ cube on my A1 :D but this seems very unnecessary :D
Edit: Also a question: whats up with the yellow-ish colour in the upper half, is this the blemish you were talking about?
That’s a cube measuring ~6.5mm x 6.5mm x 6.5mm…I know the A1 is small, but that seems fairly unambitious.
Fuck you right. 😂 Damn you, volume law! I mean 256 mm * 256 mm * 256 mm (so more like 16,7 Million mm³)
This always trips me up. Would the correct way of writing: a cube 256mm to an edge
256³mm³? That feels inelegant.
Do the math myself so 1.67*10⁶mm³? Which seems like I’m asking the reader to simplify what I complicated.
Or 256mm³? That seems true to speech it’s a 256mm cube…
If you go for something like lightning infill of 15% and 3 walls, you could probably make that print in something like 11h and only use 750g filament.
If there were ever a poster child for printing something with a 0.4mm layer height of possibly even more, it may be this. One wonders how much infill you’d need to make it strong enough to sit on. Otherwise, I don’t know what the heck you’d do with it.
If you’re a “regular sized adult” I honestly think you can get away with 30% adaptive cubic, and 5-6 walls and top/bottom layers.
That’s pushes it to 2.4kg filament and a +2 days print though with a regular 0.4mm nozzle and 0.3mm layer height.
Sounds plausible to me. On reflection, I think I’d just run off a wooden box on my table saw if I need a cube to sit on.
My problem, as I’m sure many others have, is admitting when 3D printing something probably isn’t the best solution…
Yeah I agree, 3d printing is not the right tool for a simple large box.
There are many good applications for FDM printed items. But I still have a metal lathe, mill, drill press, and welders for all the other times that FDM is a poor choice.
I think the yellowish part is just a shadow from something, because the ‘remove screws’ stickers on the sides also change color
Yes, and let me tell you about how many times I’ve resolved to finally one day remove those stickers and I still haven’t. Now that they’ve been thoroughly baked in the enclosure they’re on there good.
Ah yeah. Now that you say it. Guess i was a bit blind. Still a bit strange :D
That’s just the shadow cast by the gantry blocking the LEDs that are all arranged along the front edge of the machine.
Rather, I have two of these which are just tiny specs of grey or black or grey or something, which got printed right into the top surfaces. They’re small, but annoyingly visible. This is what I get for buying cheap filament, possibly.
Thanks! This might also be a bit of burning by the nozzle slagging behind. I also see that sometimes on my prints
Could be. Usually when that happens there’s some variance in the surface, too, or some booger left behind. I didn’t see that here but it’s possible it simply got mashed flat back into the surface on the adjacent pass.