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Do you have a family member with a 3D printer? Possibly someone who is a "print tourist", downloading a printing things like this lizard (pardon me, it is an Axolotl) but who never learns the 3D design tools to make his or her own! Turn that wasted opportunity into something productive. This creature took much more time to print than these two jigger case molds for making mugs. The person on Thingiverse who made it has undeniable CAD expertise, far beyond mine (it has articulating tail, body, head, legs and feet). He/she may have a dozen multi-material 3D printers running in the basement churning these out in multi-color madness, feeding a vast "model mooch" culture and revelling in the money it can make (this model was also available as a file, it cost $4, very inexpensive compared many). If you are a pottery or a hobby potter, 3D design is a great way to channel creativity, a real adrenaline-pumping and practical skill. My know-how with Fusion 360 is much less than this, but it has been plenty to make dozens of molds and cutters and tools. So commandeer that printer from its current "print pirate" master and turn it into an awesome asset to your ceramic practice!
This was printed as an assembly. The grooves between the teeth were filled with printed support but it cleaned out easily. The hinge moves smoothly and has no slack. I did not draw it, I downloaded it as an upgrade to the door in my Creality K1 Max printer. Making something like this is a good lesson in the precision that consumer printers are capable of. Stratasys, a long-time maker of industrial 3D printers is suing Bambu Labs, a maker of low-cost consumer machines similar to those from Creality. Stratasys apparently sees a real threat from consumer printers that are gaining quickly, and in some ways surpassing the capabilities of industrial devices.
Buy me a coffee and we can talk