Los Angeles Times

My six weeks as a newbie at 3-D printing

- home@latimes.com BY R. DANIEL FOSTER

The ability to print out objects within one’s home — a replacemen­t oven knob, snowflake ornament, cellphone case — has been among this century’s most intriguing promises, thanks to the advent of consumer 3-D printers. ¶ The hyped bet: Soon every home will harbor such a printer — but for what real purpose? Certainly, kids have a blast with these gadgets, printing out an anatomical heart for a science project, or for fun, a Bat-signal that attaches to cellphone flashlight­s. Other users create items for home businesses, churning out jewelry, art and decor. ¶ I decided to test the promise of these machines by using a 3-D printer for six weeks in my home. What would I make? Week 1

The MakerBot Replicator printer arrives ($2,899; a new model is priced $400 less). Setup takes about two hours. The machine, the size of an oversized microwave oven, sits on my kitchen table. I call it the beast.

Suggested initial prints include an earbud case, and a model of the Supreme Court building (the maximum build height is about six inches).

Instead, I peruse objects on Thingivers­e, an online catalog of 2 million user-created designs all for no-cost download and print. I choose Mr. Jaws, a shark-shaped bag clip ( jaws and teeth clamp the bag).

After downloadin­g the file and tweaking size and print resolution in an app, an orange Mr. Jaws prints out in about 30 minutes. Success! During printing, I can’t tear my eyes from the precise cyborg-like passes as the device honeycombs successive layers of plastic to build the object.

Weeks 2 and 3

I print out a nut and bolt. I know that sounds lame, but the fact that I can do this on my kitchen table seems moderately miraculous — manufactur­ing democratiz­ed.

I advance to printing a double elliptical gear — center arms that gear to two teethed wheels, and then for fun, a small heart that’s inset with a removable puzzle piece that reads in raised letters: “a piece of my heart.” I make several, and give them to friends; a few question why the lettering is skewed.

“But I made it myself,” I protest. “It’s plastic,” a neighbor replies. Undaunted, I begin to download a Ghostbuste­rs Proton Pack Neutron Thrower but the print time (literally days for the various parts) dissuades me. Also, my printer-beast sounds like a droid with its loud squeaks, beeps and squawks. It’s like living with R2-D2 — who never shuts off.

Living with a robot, in fact, had me wondering about electrical costs, which I discovered were roughly equivalent to a laptop charger. Two-pound filament spools cost $48 and last about three to six months depending on usage. Average users replace the machine’s $199 sophistica­ted hot glue gun (the extruder) two to three times over a three- to fiveyear span, after which time, well, it’s time to buy the latest model. This technology moves fast.

Week 4

I print out a five-inch-tall knee joint, wrap it as a gift, and present it to a hospitaliz­ed friend who just had his knee replaced. It just seemed the right thing to do. Besides anatomy, other Thingivers­e categories include: art, tools, toys and games, gadgets, fashion and household objects.

Weeks 5 and 6

I experiment with Thingivers­e’s customizer, loading a photo of a friend’s baby for print on a keychain that has a flat pane for printing raised images. But the photo’s printout looks like a blob.

I try a vase. That process goes well, but the machine scripts a roof over the vase’s top, enclosing it. Tech support suggests that I cancel the print just before the roof prints, which sounds “somewhat primitive,” the tech guy admits.

The primitive note is a good one to conclude on –– since for me, home-based 3-D printing seems at once a marvel, but also coarse with its lengthy print times and noise. I merely toyed with the machine for its novelty without finding a conclusive use for it.

For me, having a 3-D printer around the house was a bit like owning a noisy droid that lacks a program that would give it purpose.

But that Bat-signal for my cellphone flashlight does sound intriguing.

 ?? Photograph­s by R. Daniel Foster ?? WHAT TO MAKE? Here, MakerBot Replicator produces a vase. Free designs can be found online.
Photograph­s by R. Daniel Foster WHAT TO MAKE? Here, MakerBot Replicator produces a vase. Free designs can be found online.
 ??  ?? FOR THE TEST, the writer used this MakerBot Replicator. The 3-D printer sits on the kitchen table, ready for action.
FOR THE TEST, the writer used this MakerBot Replicator. The 3-D printer sits on the kitchen table, ready for action.

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