For people with enough time to drive from the West…
Driving through Salt Lake City stopping off at Bonneville Salt Flats for a spirited drive can be fun. Recommend thoroughly washing salt off the car at Monkey Shine Car Wash after you’re done setting PR’s, drifting, donuts and such…
I70 drive along Colorado River through the Rocky’s is a fun drive too, mainly because there’s lots of great scenery to appreciate. Lots of interesting stops for pics and hikes like Loveland Pass at the Continental Divide.
For west coast folks that miss Fry’s, consider checking out Microcenter in Denver, in the meantime, can virtual tour their store.
Late april will be the tail end of the ski season and the beginning of the muddy season. Make sure you have the right gear before hiking a pass in those conditions in Colorado.
We have taken the california zephyr Amtrak train both ways from denver to San Fransisco. It is a beautiful journey, for sure.
Almost ready. 6 screws and a belt. Then I need to figure out the belt to table interface, maybe some sort of hook or just some clamps. I plan on 3m pull to release tape for the rail.
Building a printer and a LR back to back I have to say the cnc’s are at least 2x as easy to build. There are no delicate, funky steps until final steps of mounting it to the table. Where the printer, it feels like every step is touchy to get it perfect.
Already considered a front grill with V1E Engineering text and logo, a self marketing machine? . Wish I moved text more to the right so fully visible when homed.
As much as I love my logo at the show there is a lot of them. Hopefully I will set it up to draw an ISO view of an LR3, with a RMRRF logo, and a V1 Logo on the page. So that kinda gets one right on the machine. Speaking of, I have to remember to draw the logo’s first, then the ISO view. That way the logo is always on the page.
I share your pain, but have to say that PrusaSlicer Organic supports have given me a whole new way of thinking.
They are not going to take over and I’m not going to “design for supports” but I thought I’d try them on this tricky little sucker and wow… just wow!
Do they make 0.3mm dry-erase markers? I did look at getting a stick on dry-erase surface to draw on, if I can find one that is removable and is rolled up for shipping I can give it a try. As long as I get at least one nice drawing to put on my wall.
Heffe was it you that made all those Sandify drawings for the wall?
My ;local dollar store has 16X20" dry erase foam board. It’s 1/4" foam with a dry erase surface on both sides… you could probably use double sided tape with that and it would be good.