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Simplify3D, Prusa Slicer and Creality Print opening three different 3MF models digitalfire.com. Rotating, panning, zooming, duplicating, mirroring, place-on-face, positioning, slice-previewing, infill, support and overhang threshhold, brimming, generating a G-Code file for printing and printing direct.
Our wish is that this video removes a few barriers that might have been preventing you from investigating the use of 3D design and printing in your ceramic practice. Don’t miss out on the potential by being overwhelmed; just take it a step at a time, solving each obstacle in your path as it arises.
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A "Slicer" is, as its name suggests, an app that slices up a virtual object so a 3D printer can print it layer-by-layer. This is a 3MF format file of a "Case Mold" for a handle. It was created by "Cad design" software Fusion three sixty. The 3MF format has many advantages over traditional STL files. I'll open this one in "Simplify3D", it is a paid special purpose slicer. Like others that come free with 3D printer hardware, it can rotate, zoom and pan using the mouse. And, it can dissect, combine and resize objects. Here is an example of how it can duplicate and reflect an object. If you use this slicer you likely won't need any further instruction.

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Shown here are Creality Slicer, Prusa Slicer and Simplify 3D. Each of these can import STL, OBJ and 3MF files. Each permits resizing, rotating, reflecting and duplicating individual items and can efficiently place and space multiple items and groups. Each saves or exports as 3MF files. On the right is the Fusion 360 print dialog where I can choose which slicer and which format to send.
OBJ files were introduced in 1980 for visual rendering (e.g. animation, gaming, special effects). Files store surface geometry as interconnected triangles and define surface textures, materials and colors. These features were overkill for early 3D printers.
STL (Stereolithography) files were developed in 1987 by 3D Systems specifically for CAD and 3D printing, having a single focus on geometry. They were simple and computationally efficient (and also unitless like OBJ, assuming mm). STLs permitted only one object. They dominated early 3D printing processes (FDM, SLA, SLS), where color or texture was irrelevant and provided a simple standard for industry growth. However, modern printers can now do color, texture and multi-material, thus...
3MF (3D Manufacturing Format) files were introduced in 2015 specifically for more advanced 3D printing. To OBJ they add object orientation, units, printing instructions and meta information. Objects in 3MF files can be manipulated separately in the slicer.
All three formats are generated by modern CAD software (for handoff to a slicer app). 3MF is the preferred one.

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3D design and printing is so valuable in ceramics that we can't stop pushing it. Here is how one goes about 3D printing a 3MF model file downloaded from this site. Why 3MF? Unlike the much older STL format, it enables multiple objects, units of measure and meta information. If you are on the page hosting this image, there is a link to the five-minute tutorial video at the bottom (otherwise click the image).
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