Also good for composting and making room in your recycling bin

-37 points

You’ve designed a niche solution to a problem that doesn’t exist.

Use a box knife. Or, for a more versatile tool, get a Morakniv Companion.

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4 points

I hope you only drink room temperature tap water. Any flavor makes you a hypocrite.

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-8 points

Your reasoning is so obscure very few will follow. CONSUME!

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21 points

Welcome to the world of 3d printing

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9 points

If I don’t design and print something I could buy I might be tempted to do more mods for my printer.

Things like this give us… balance. Luckily I have a new project… building a Voron so it’s both something new AND printing printer parts.

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5 points

Things like this give us… balance.

Otherwise known as, “Justification for ownership of printer.”

Look, I totally didn’t just buy this thing as a hobby to make more parts for itself! See, I actually do occasionally make useful things with it!!!

That’s what I tell myself, anyway…

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0 points

This looks a lot like trolling. The community here certainly doesn’t seem to care for it.

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-3 points

I don’t like what you’ve said so you’re a troll. We don’t serve your kind around here.

SMRT.

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8 points

Hard disagree.

  1. Waste packaging is a common problem.
  2. Lots of folks have cats
  3. You can already buy a commercially made strip and strap cutter. This is just fixed size version that uses a more common blade.

Honestly, my bigger gripe with the video is the little dots of hot glue. That feels like wouldn’t hold up (I’ve had cats disassemble store bought scratchers). I’d brush on flour paste or thinned down school glue for non-toxic full coverage. You could even mix in cat nip to encourage use.

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-12 points

My objection is that it’s needless consumption that sucks relative alternatives such as learning to use a box knife and starting a compost bin.

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18 points

Good luck getting consistent cuts while you’re freehanding. The idea is to make the nice flat cat scratching pad, and also being able to make the tool with the tool printer you have at home

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7 points

I mean, you could make a jig to use a box cutter to make consistent width strips very easily with three pieces of scrap wood. But this commenter coming in here for the express purpose of trying to shit on 3D printer hobbyists was a stupid move on his part.

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2 points

Or a ruler. And make the strips the width of the ruler. The only “extra” needed is a cutting surface. This plastic gizmo simply eliminates the need for a work surface, nothing else.

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7 points

make a jig

You mean like the handheld jig seen in the demo?

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11 points

I mean that’s kinda the whole deal with 3d printing, it’s useful for really niche applications where you can just add a small amount of convenience to your life.

Someone else commented about this being good for school kids so they can safely make cat scratchers to donate to animal shelters, and as a cat owner with a constant pile of recycling I can see this being actually useful if I wanna avoid spending $20-$40 on one of those fancier cardboard cat scratchers from Target or whatever.

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-9 points

I mean that’s kinda the whole deal with 3d printing, it’s useful for really niche applications where you can just add a small amount of convenience to your life.

Is it? All I ever request to be printed is the proprietary part that prematurely broke as it was designed to do.

Someone else commented about this being good for school kids

Instead of teaching them to use scissors? We’re raising a generation that can’t think or do for themselves. They’re reliant upon consumption.

as a cat owner with a constant pile of recycling I can see this being actually useful

As an adult you think it’s more useful than a box knife? It’s not even going to be faster than a box knife with straight edge. And, why do you need a product to pet your cat?

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3 points

Boomer posting

“Kids today!!!”

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4 points

I work with kids with significant disabilities who we keep in public school until they’re age 22. They do unskilled jobs and volunteer ‘work’ and safety is a big concern. If there are five students and one teacher at a table, a plastic device that automatically measures and has a hidden blade is going to be much better for them than scissors or box knives. Yes, we do need to teach children to safely use everyday items and for most kids that’s fine, but there are some for whom ‘just do it my way’ doesn’t work. Your life experience may not be the same as that of other people. Teach generally, but make space for the individual.

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7 points

Cutting carboard with scissors? It can be done, but it’s a chore amd the results are poor. I wouldn’t wish it on school children.

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8 points

It’s essentially just a jig to use regular utility blades to quickly cut strips of equal width.

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-11 points

And, it sucks relative a box knife, straight edge, and stop block. The only decent use case I’ve seen presented is for the small minority of developmentally disabled individuals that require extreme safety measures.

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-16 points

Reminder to avoid using Amazon boxes for this: Their boxes contain a rodenticide to keep rats/mice away from their products.

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29 points

Reminder to check snopes before believing random internet factoids:

https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/amazon-spray-boxes-chemicals/

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8 points

Thank you, I’m educated and savvy and I almost fell for that. Why oh WHY are there sooooo many trolls about?

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8 points

in your defense Amazon would spray their boxes with poison if it didn’t add any extra costs.

PSA: Companies couldn’t give a shit about you or your packages. the sooner you realize that, the sooner you’ll realize how insignificant you are in the world.

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3 points

This sounds like a Facebook fact.

Oh yep it is.

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11 points

Is there a source on this? My initial fact check search suggests this was debunked.

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37 points

Looks like the specific design in this video is being sold here, but if you’d prefer something that isn’t behind a pay wall there’s a few options (like this one).

Side rant: I’m all for people getting compensation for creative work but I feel like it’s wrong to put the source file behind a waywall instead of simply selling the actual print directly to people that don’t have access to a printer, that seems much more fair imo

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14 points
*

I tried to buy the model from an artist recently for personal use(friend wanted some Mickey ears of a specific style). Person told me no and quoted me $130 with a 3 week wait time for a physical product that was something I could print in about an hour myself. For a Disney product they were already infringing on themselves.

Went elsewhere and found someone selling the model for $7. Figured that was fair for the effort to transform it into a model file.

Turned out I was wrong - only took me 20 minutes to print.

Some of these artists are ridiculous…

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2 points

I’ve made a few things. One, Mickey shaped cabinet hardware I put up for free because I didn’t want to deal with Disney. Though I might put the raw print up on Etsy or something just because.

Another is a frame to turn a Disney name tag into an ornament. I’m selling the completed product rather than releasing the design because I wanted to really offer it to people who didn’t have 3d printers and wanted to ensure that it met my standards. And I didn’t want competition. That said, it takes quite a lot of time to print, prep, sand, and paint. I spend a couple hours in finishing each and sell it at a price that… Totally doesn’t make it worth it.

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18 points

Selling the actual print is more work than selling the STL.

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5 points

Oh definitely, I just think it’s easier to justify paying for a physical product than it is paying for a single file if you still need to manufacture it yourself. Still a valid business practice, I’m just biased toward “information should be free” and all that.

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21 points

It’s $3 which is well worth the time saved by not having to design it from scratch.

Someone had to use their skills to create it, do you think they should work for free?

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6 points

I mean, buying things like clothes patterns and carpentry plans is definitely a thing. An stl is really no different.

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8 points

But it’s not just information, someone sat in front of their computer and put the work in to design it, then print it and iterate.

You’re paying for that process, and for the time and effort the person took to acquire the necessary skills.

However, there should be a noticeable price difference due to the easy scaling / replicatibility when distributing digital goods.

I’m with you insofar as the final product feels like it should be 3 bucks, not the file.

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1 point

So much more. It’s not even in the same ballpark.

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1 point

This is cool but my cat won’t touch cardboard scratchers.

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1 point

👍

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18 points

Awesome! Is that a real device that’s available for sale? Those would be good school or scout projects to donate to animal shelters.

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9 points

I have the STL files on Thangs for 3D printing.

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4 points

I’ve been thinking about getting a 3D printer. Well, yesterday I decided I need a 3D printer. I know nothing at all. What should I get?

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4 points

I have a 3D printer buyer’s guide on my website that lists a few. I mostly use and would recommend any Bambu printer, there’s a few that can suit any price range. Elegoo also make good printers too which won’t break the bank

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8 points

Don’t get an ender unless you want your hobby to be working on the printer. That’s fine, but it’s not the same as having something ready to go when you unbox it.

Prusa printers are quality and open source; very much worth supporting if you have the money. Your hobby will be printing things for other things if you get one.

Bambu printers are cheap, but not open source. However, you will spend most of your time actually making stuff instead of fixing the printer.

Cheap, reliable, open source/modifiable. Pick two.

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5 points

I have an AnkerMake M5 and it’s gloriously painless. There are intrinsic unavoidable challenges to 3D printing, but this thing has been incredible for casual creation.

https://www.ankermake.com/

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2 points
*

Bambu Labs A1 Mini

Cheap, high quality device, high quality prints, out of the box and printing in 25 minutes with no fiddling required.

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3 points

I own an Ender 3, 5, and a Prusa Mini. The mini is by far my most reliable printer, but both enders have had a lot of work done to them to get them where they are… and not quite click to print yet.

At one of my jobs I maintained some 35 Prusa Mk3s, about a dozen Elegoo’s, and witnessed their graveyard of Anycubics and some other brands. The Prusa’s generally only needed to be unclogged or have their nozzle changed less than once a month, with only a couple failures per week max, the room also was not temperature controlled and they had some… questionable engineering practices.

The elego’s were like pulling teeth, needing glue to keep it adhered, frequent clogs and skips, thermistors needing replacement after under 100 print hours, blobbing would get into the part coolig fans. Small leveling knobs. Prusa’s IMO were designed to be serviceable, but seem to need it way less.

Especially at a business, the premium on Prusa printers over say bambu labs is well worth their customer support. Ive never used a Bambu so I cant necessarily recommended or not, and I do wish I had an MMU on the cheap as you’d get with their mini, but Im most pleased with my Prusa mini

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4 points
*

Ender 3 is pretty good introductory model and does nice prints with little effort.

If you’re a buy once, cry once sort of person, Prusa makes good stuff that has a lot of community support.

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2 points

A lot of libraries offer 3D printing for about the cost of materials.

It’s worth trying out before dropping huge cash if it’s possible near you.

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