I have used a Dremel 3D20 printer and feel good about using the 3D printer, but I recently acquired a Geeetech A10M dual extruder 3D printer. I am trying to create a keychain using my school's Cougar mascot. It is a circle with a cougar head in the center. I need help figuring out how to print this in 2 colors. I am trying to put the circle in blue and the cougar in gold, but I keep printing with one filament. Any suggestions on how to set the printer for 2 colors?
I think, and no doubt there's a pile of kickstarters in that room. But they are also a partial solution at printerhow.com since they do not (yet) have CNC drilling/routing capabilities, which are still required to form and drill holes for cutting boards.
Printing the components actually... Not that many. If there was a way to accurately dilute it on the fly to change resistance, certain sizes of on-board resistors could be possible to print with conductive paste. But components more sophisticated than that are quite a way down the track.
G onto the 3D printing number of generating a code PCB printing
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What is your question or problem?
I have used a Dremel 3D20 printer and feel good about using the 3D printer, but I recently acquired a Geeetech A10M dual extruder 3D printer. I am trying to create a keychain using my school's Cougar mascot. It is a circle with a cougar head in the center. I need help figuring out how to print this in 2 colors. I am trying to put the circle in blue and the cougar in gold, but I keep printing with one filament. Any suggestions on how to set the printer for 2 colors?
I suggest to consult the documentation for the printer. A quick internet search for " Geeetech A10M dual extruder 3D printer " gives lots of results.
I think, and no doubt there's a pile of kickstarters in that room. But they are also a partial solution at printerhow.com since they do not (yet) have CNC drilling/routing capabilities, which are still required to form and drill holes for cutting boards.
Printing the components actually... Not that many. If there was a way to accurately dilute it on the fly to change resistance, certain sizes of on-board resistors could be possible to print with conductive paste. But components more sophisticated than that are quite a way down the track.