Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

Not sure I'm at the regret stage, but the 3D printer has been sitting mostly unused, and I'm not sure that'll change. There have been a few things that were good to print, but mostly used to print fidget toys for the kids and their mates.




I’m actually surprised I didn’t hit this problem. My 3D printer has been wildly useful.

I seriously thought it would be another fad hobby that I drop immediately. But now I’ve gone as far as learning 3D modeling which I never really expected to do. I actually have more projects going on than I have printing capacity for sometimes.

I wish I had perfect advice for getting the most out of it.

Maybe this one will help: remember that even cheap plastic products are often more expensive than printing your own. That $10-20 doodad from the store is still more expensive than a LOT of filament. I’ll list out some stuff I’ve printed:

- Planter pots

- Knock box (for espresso)

- portfilter stand for tamping (espresso)

- espresso machine mod kit enclosure

- A loom for a friend who weaves

- “neon” LED signs with custom words (designed by me based on YouTube tutorial)

- Same concept but used to make might up address numbers for the house

- A triangle-shaped piece to guide the extending kitchen sink sprayer hose so it stops getting caught on stuff under the cabinets

- A replacement clip for a Packit reusable container

- Designing your own wall or under-desk mount for any custom size object is trivial

- Tea bag organizer

- Bookmarks

- Name tags/3D labels (you can pause prints and change filament colors at a specific layer even without an automated material system)

- Bag clips

- Toothpick dispenser

- Toothpaste squeezer dispenser thing to keep the tube neat

- storage organizers, including a whole pegboard system hanging up all my tools and junk

- Contact lens storage boxes

- Replacement latches for plastic bins

I haven’t printed them yet but I’m very interested in some of the cool mini-racks, mini NAS systems, and small form factor PC cases you can print from scratch rather than buying them. For example there’s a design on makerworld where you grab a cheap mini PC, an nvme to SATA adapter, and an AliExpress SATA 3.5” backplane, and boom, you’ve built a consumer NAS alternative for a fraction of the price.

Hopefully some of these ideas inspire you to get more use out of your machine!


> A triangle-shaped piece to guide the extending kitchen sink sprayer hose so it stops getting caught on stuff under the cabinets

Holy hell that's genius. I know what I'm printing tomorrow! :D


Haha yep! Literally just an extruded triangle, taped to some cabinetry with painter’s tape.

The weight would get caught on some cabinetry piece. Now that piece is made to intersect more gradually with the triangle.


I’d use it all the time but the workflow is obnoxious. Download a model, manually run the slicing software. Load it onto a usb. Plug it into the printer.

If I could click print from my phone I’d be running it constantly.


Bambu printers have this ability - works amazingly well.

How do they handle the slicing? Just make good default assumptions and slice for you?



Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: