• 1 Post
  • 21 Comments
Joined 10 months ago
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Cake day: January 28th, 2024

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  • Sounds like you’ve got some stuff figured out and you should be proud of that! It sucks when friends drift apart, maybe you could initiate some hangouts if you haven’t tried that already. Not just ‘we should hang out some time’ but something like ‘hey want to to get together this weekend and see a movie’.

    As for feeling lost and bored, I can relate. I still don’t really know how to handle that, I try to lose myself in a hobby, or deep dive into something that interests me. Doesn’t make it stop but it helps forget about it for a while.

    Stay real friend <3




  • The picture is of the ‘finished’ pin, I’d still like to refine the process a bit.

    The general process I follow is:

    • print the pin
    • use a casting sand like petrobond and fill a metal container
    • talcum power the printed pin
    • press the pin into the casting sand to make the void for casting
    • heat up the bismuth until it is liquid
    • heat up the actual pin (looks like a thumbtack)
    • pour the molten bismuth into the void, and quickly put the actual pin piece in the molten bismuth, if it’s not hot enough the bismuth will cool and the pin won’t sink in
    • wait for it to cool (about a minute) then pull the pin out with some pliers (it’s still hot so you don’t want to touch it at that point)
    • take a dremel to any flashing that occurred
    • paint as required (I’m just using nail polish right now since it’s pretty durable)

    Hopefully that helps! If you have any other questions I’d be happy to answer them :)





  • I just created a new tool for my company, and I opted to leave out jQuery as I wanted to see how it would be without it.

    After going through the process I don’t think I’ll use jQuery again unless it is already a dependancy. Vanilla pretty much has everything covered that jQuery made easier, just need to be a bit more verbose in some cases, but I’ve found that typically makes the code easier to read and modify.

    No hate if jQuery is your thing though, just if you’re on the fence I’d give vanilla a go and see if it fits your needs!






  • That’s fair, there is a bit of information overload online when looking into it.

    If you want my two cents, find the cheapest print with auto bed levelling (mingda magicians are good and cheap) and just start playing around.You don’t need to know much to start, and you learn what you need to as you encounter problems.

    That’s how I got into at least, and now been printing for like 5+ years.