
This a a plate that I made up real quick because I was sick of 20mm boxes. 20mm boxes were just too small and cause sagging and all kinds of craziness. This also makes it easier to check if your Makerbot is printing the exact size it should be.Also useful for checking if your print bed is level. (I recommend using pencil springs to level it. http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:6558 details this)Also useful to see if your belts are properly tightened. It the circles don’t come out as perfect circles, you likely need to tighten your belts. I know I did.Also useful to see if you’ve got your w/t, flow rate, feed speed, and layer height are set up right. MK5 skeinforge instructions: If it’s printing way blobby, try lowering w/t (in all places in skeinforge - carve and fill I think). Or increasing feed speed. If it’s printing with gaps in-between lines increase w/t or decrease feed speed.There are some key skeinforge values that I think are very important with a cupcake MK5. Here’s some of the key values that I use. (I’ve also included my skeinforge profile) Carve:Fill:Preface:Raft:Speed:Stretch: (activate it! pretty machine dependent I think but I changed the following. The documentation says that the perimeter inside stretch over perimeter width is the most important value and that a bigger value = bigger holes. It also says that perimeter outside stretch over perimeter width should be ⅓ PIS/w)Temperature:Plate dimensions: 3 in x 3 inHole sizes: 25mm 20mm 15mm 10mm 5mm 3mm 1mmIf your dimensions don’t come out just right, I recommend adjusting the stretch settings in skeinforge. Using stretch, your dimensions can be tweaked ever so slightly.Also, the best upgrade I’ve added to my cupcake MK5 is a #89 light bulb detailed about ¾ the way down of this: http://wiki.makerbot.com/forum/t-267812/bot-stops-printing-after-it-outlines-the-first-layer
- 0 inches x 0 inches x 0 inches
- this product is 3D printed
- 16 available colors
- material is a strong plastic
- free delivery by May 05
- 0 parts
