Designing for vase mode - 3D design for 3D printing

Check out my 2nd channel, TT Racing: @ttracingYT To get the best out of 3D printing, it helps if you can design your own parts. In this tutorial series, we will learn to use a free 3D CAD program to do just that. In this episode, I demonstrate how to use simple shapes with helices and patterns to create repeating geometry suitable for vase mode 3D printing. The same concepts are repeated each time, with small variations, which means you can easily change aspects to experiment and see how the final result is altered. I also cover what vase mode is and how to activate it in your slicer. This tutorial is near the end of a long series. It assumes you are already proficient with Onshape. If you try to follow this as a beginner, you will find it way too fast. Please see the earlier videos in the playlist to pick up the basics. 3D design for 3D printing source CAD: 0:00 Introduction 3D design for 3D printing playlist: Printables holidays decoration competition: 0:55 What is vase/spiral contour mode? 2:30 How to activate vase/spiral contour mode in your slicer 3:50 Design requirements 5:34 Source CAD in Onshape 5:46 Linear pattern vase 7:27 Circular pattern vase 9:17 Circular pattern with swept helix vase 11:08 Projected shape, curve pattern vase 13:12 Helix curve pattern around curvy object vase pmd instructions: 15:46 Christmas bauble style vase 17:02 Experimentation vase 17:57 Conclusion Other vases shown in this video Wavy Pencil Holder by SNASA: Over Engineered Olpe Vase by Nat A Cyborg: Faceted vase by gregp228: Buy quality and affordable filament from X3D. Buy 3, get 1 free and a free sample pack with every order: Get Quality Resins from 3D Printers Online. 5% off storewide for Teaching Tech subscribers [Code: tech5] Take a look around and if you like what you see, please subscribe. Support me on Patreon:
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