Posts with «3d printing» label

Hamburg Maker Meeting 2012 and Arduino Due preview

Hamburg Maker Meeting 2012, which took place last week and involved about 200 visitors and more than 20 exhibitors, has been a fantastic opportunity to meet and share experience regarding several topics, such as 3D printing, hacking, retro gaming and so on. At the Attraktor Makerspace, several projects have been presented and demonstrated by their inventors, among which we highlight a very nice Arduino-based floppy drive organ that has been employed to play the Tetris game theme.

Moreover, among the others events planned for the meeting, a special sneak-preview session allowed all the interested people to get some insights on the new Arduino Due board, released a couple of days ago.

A video of the event can be found here, while here you may find more pictures.

More information can be found on the homepage of the meeting.

[Via: Hamburg Maker Meeting website]

FreeBOT (work in progress)

Project

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Let's Make Robots 20 Jul 22:16
3d printing  arduino  flash  freebot  gyro  neo  vb.net  

Intern’s Corner: The Arduino Bumper

Inspired by Arduino design and the iPhone Bumper, I present to you the 3D-printable Arduino Bumper!

The Arduino Bumper is a 3D-printed case for Arduino boards that use the Uno form factor. It allows the Arduino to be placed onto a flat conductive surface without running the risk of shorting out your microcontroller. It also keeps the bottom of the board from scratching your table.

The bumper securely press-fits onto the Arduino boards, staying in place until you want to remove it, at which point, it can be popped right off. Recessed grooves located under where the Arduino pins sit allow the back of the board to sit flat in the bumper.

I designed this case to fit the Arduino, but I also wanted to it to reflect the Arduino design instead of just making a box. I decided to design around the look of the Arduino board, thus I needed to make an offset of its outline for the general shape. Looking up the dimensions for the Arduino, I found an excellent drawing by Wayne and Layne, found via Arduino.cc.

Using the dimensions from the drawing, I drew the outline of the Uno in Autodesk Inventor, created an outer offset by 0.008” for press-fit spacing, and another one at 0.029” to complete the 2-perimeter-thick wall. This means that when 3D printed with a 0.4mm nozzle (such as on a standard Ultimaker or MakerBot Replicator), the printer will lay down two strands of plastics that are solidly fused together, resulting in a very sturdy wall. Extruding the outlines gave me the general shapes of the bumper. I then added the grooves for the pins, and cut-aways for the USB and power jack. Lastly, I cut made cut-aways for the underside of the board for the USB mounting backets and power jack pins. I gave the corners a nice 45-degree chamfer to give it that Arduino look.

The Arduino Bumper and the Inventor source file are available for download at Thingiverse. I printed mine on our Ultimaker, at 0.1mm-thickness-resolution, in under 20 minutes. At such a small layer thickness, it feels incredibly solid, almost like it was injection molded.  Go print your own bumper today!