Assembly instructions?

Hi everyone. I’m new to CNC and just bought a kit and I am firing up the Ender3 to crank out some prints.
I have a question about assembly…I found this page: www. v1engineering .com/ assembly/

But many of the links appear to be dead.

Is this info current or is there a better resource to walk through each assembly step (sections or topics such as table, conduit, base, z-axis…)

Thanks in advance,
David

Start by following the link below. It will take you to the top page of the MPCNC setup and assembly pages.

https://docs.v1engineering.com/mpcnc/intro/

EDIT: oh, also…
Welcome to the party

1 Like

Haha! Thanks Tim, that’s just what I needed! Looking forward to the new challenge :slight_smile:

No problem Dave. There’s lots of folks around to help with any questions you might have.

I would suggest that you set up a spreadsheet for the printing as the infills are different for many of the components.

After you finish each job, put a small label on to indicate what it is. Some look very similar.

Put the coffee on, get a good book, put your feet up and crack on…

All the best.

Rob

3 Likes

What? These forums aren’t good enough? It took me almost a year to get through most of the back threads… Sure, a lot of them are out of date, and I had to stop myself from posting to a lot of years-old threads, but it’s good to see the evolution of the community, the sorts of issues people have, and the various solutions (and improvements on those solutions) over the years.

I’m super grateful for all the people smarter than me who engineered random parts into a working solution so I can come along and build something amazing. I know thousands of hours went into trial and error getting this dialed in from the community. Hopefully I can pay that back a bit once I get my feet wet.

Thanks everyone! I’m sure I’ll be seeing you around more :slight_smile:

It was mostly a lot of fun too. Not just blood sweat and tears, many hours of smiles and jumping up and down with joy.

For those with the qualifications for actual jumping up… Some of us are better equipped for just the down parts, and even then, we try to be mindful of antiques, pets, and small children that we aren’t in a position to replace anytime soon.