For context, this article is an opinion piece co-authored by: Jeffrey A. Singer - A senior fellow at the Cato institute, a republican think tank that receives much of its funding from large republican donors/foundations…
Except that the author of ruamel.yaml: refuses to use git [0] refuses to take community submissions (except through Stack Overflow? Seems like a misuse of SO) [1] and refuses to implement .dumps() [2]. He is difficult…
I still think Tile lost out on a gigantic market by not making it easier for hardware manufacturers to integrate into their ecosystem. They should have been practically begging oems to embed it.
Aluminum Nitride actually has a favorable formation so they have to use much less friendly gasses like Sulfur Hexaflouride.
Minutes is a stretch. It will likely take multiple tools and setups to make a mold, and even more if you're starting from a billet that needs facing etc.
You'd be surprised actually! Prusa uses no gearing between the motor and the primary drive gear and it's a 200 step/rev NEMA 17. You can transmit high frequencies quite easily, and I've actually seen bad stepper motors…
You're talking about a $40 tool just to flash the storage vs a part (micro SD adapter) that they give you with the SD card for free because it's so cheap. Also doing a quick survey for the rated cycle counts on M.2 vs…
If they didn't use SD cards, the storage would be more reliable, but users would spend a lot more time fixing bricked boards. By allowing for removeable storage (in a format that can be plugged into any other computer…
> People limping might serve as example that a 'state of the art, well trained neural net' can't achieve good motion with less than perfect hardware. I think that people limping has more to do with avoiding pain than…
They're actually using servo motors! They refer to it as a "servo-driven parallel gantry system" in the abstract.
Checkout the second to last page for pictures: https://arxiv.org/abs/1709.05918 I think you bring up a good point about the lack of precision at high speed. I think the next big thing in this industry is going to be…
> Although, I disagree that a screw drive is needed. I use hobbed gearwheel drive on my extruders and rarely is the issue the hobb slipping. Typically, it is the motor stalling instead. Although that may be the problem…
I wouldn't compare it to the screw drive they use on injection molding. Those are for pushing pellets and melted plastic, not for pushing a rod (or strand) of continuous plastic. This design uses threads on the outside…
For context, this article is an opinion piece co-authored by: Jeffrey A. Singer - A senior fellow at the Cato institute, a republican think tank that receives much of its funding from large republican donors/foundations…
Except that the author of ruamel.yaml: refuses to use git [0] refuses to take community submissions (except through Stack Overflow? Seems like a misuse of SO) [1] and refuses to implement .dumps() [2]. He is difficult…
I still think Tile lost out on a gigantic market by not making it easier for hardware manufacturers to integrate into their ecosystem. They should have been practically begging oems to embed it.
Aluminum Nitride actually has a favorable formation so they have to use much less friendly gasses like Sulfur Hexaflouride.
Minutes is a stretch. It will likely take multiple tools and setups to make a mold, and even more if you're starting from a billet that needs facing etc.
You'd be surprised actually! Prusa uses no gearing between the motor and the primary drive gear and it's a 200 step/rev NEMA 17. You can transmit high frequencies quite easily, and I've actually seen bad stepper motors…
You're talking about a $40 tool just to flash the storage vs a part (micro SD adapter) that they give you with the SD card for free because it's so cheap. Also doing a quick survey for the rated cycle counts on M.2 vs…
If they didn't use SD cards, the storage would be more reliable, but users would spend a lot more time fixing bricked boards. By allowing for removeable storage (in a format that can be plugged into any other computer…
> People limping might serve as example that a 'state of the art, well trained neural net' can't achieve good motion with less than perfect hardware. I think that people limping has more to do with avoiding pain than…
They're actually using servo motors! They refer to it as a "servo-driven parallel gantry system" in the abstract.
Checkout the second to last page for pictures: https://arxiv.org/abs/1709.05918 I think you bring up a good point about the lack of precision at high speed. I think the next big thing in this industry is going to be…
> Although, I disagree that a screw drive is needed. I use hobbed gearwheel drive on my extruders and rarely is the issue the hobb slipping. Typically, it is the motor stalling instead. Although that may be the problem…
I wouldn't compare it to the screw drive they use on injection molding. Those are for pushing pellets and melted plastic, not for pushing a rod (or strand) of continuous plastic. This design uses threads on the outside…