franzfurdinand 3 weeks ago • 100%
Those are hard seltzers. The ones I'm thinking of and drink are all just fizzy, flavored water and nothing else!
franzfurdinand 3 weeks ago • 100%
Have you tried seltzer at all? Throw some fresh citrus in and it's really good. Might even scratch the same soda itch.
franzfurdinand 3 weeks ago • 100%
I feel that. Quitting alcohol is big suck territory
franzfurdinand 3 weeks ago • 100%
Hey, stay strong. Shit gets easier, I promise. Six years sober, two years without nicotine here. I did it, and you can too.
franzfurdinand 1 month ago • 100%
I'm not ready to make the jump to Klipper just yet. I want to iron out hardware issues first.
I have a couple important takeaways. First, build the damn thing to be actually rigid out of the box. I thought I could keep it cheap with only 2020 extrusions, but I'm honestly paying a helluva lot more to add some stiffness to it.
Second, plan for your wiring at any given point to double. I got really tidy with my wiring at first and now it's an absolute nightmare. I gave up and half of it dangles off the back on the floor. It works but I really could have done a lot better with some better planning. It is truly a shameful sight.
I did add an extra pair of motors to the Z axis, bringing me to a grand total of four. I'm waiting on some stepper drivers to get it going again.
I don't have any pictures on hand, but could take some later.
franzfurdinand 1 month ago • 100%
I built myself a 400x400x500 CoreXY machine from scratch.
Honestly, my prints are dogshit unless I go slow, and then sometimes they're dogshit anyway. I have found the entire exercise as one of futility and massive frustration... but I low key love fucking with it. I can't help myself, I keep building upgrades and improvements for it. I keep sinking time and energy I don't have (and cash that I do) into this fucking heap of shit and I can't help but love it to pieces. It's dumb as fuck and it's pretty fun to work on.
Honestly the vibes are about the same for a project car. Don't daily it or you will hate yourself, but if you put it together and tune it right, you'll have a blast.
franzfurdinand 2 months ago • 100%
I signed up for it last night for exactly that reason.
franzfurdinand 2 months ago • 100%
Not an answer I was expecting, but one I'm glad to see
franzfurdinand 2 months ago • 100%
Nope, not at all! You've got it right.
franzfurdinand 2 months ago • 100%
I'm definitely a 1, and generally I don't. I do, however, really like interactive fiction in both work safe and non work safe contexts. I think I really enjoy being able to visualize it in my mind more than I do watching it.
I'm not sure if it factors into your pet theory, but I'm asexual so the appeal of physical forms is also very lost on me. That's a different can of worms that I'm happy to open if interested, but I'll leave it be if not.
franzfurdinand 2 months ago • 100%
Oh rad! Keep your eyes peeled for conventions!
franzfurdinand 2 months ago • 100%
Speaking of, Anthrocon actually just wrapped up this year. You should go next year! It's always a blast!
franzfurdinand 3 months ago • 100%
Ah, well, fair. Would have made for a great story! 🙂
franzfurdinand 3 months ago • 100%
A big swing, but I'm genuinely rooting for you.
franzfurdinand 3 months ago • 100%
I bought my parents a laser printer after years of them being incredibly frustrated by inkjets. I got them the same model as me, as well as a spare toner cartridge.
I'm still on my original toner cartridge, and I've had it for probably six years or so.
My parents are in their late 40's and early 50's. I think I might have accidentally gotten them a lifetime supply of printing.
franzfurdinand 3 months ago • 100%
I uh... Don't really have a lot to help you with your direct situation, but I do know that nair is designed to (mildly) chemically burn you. That's how it destroys the hair. Make sure you have it all off of you so it doesn't continue to work (it sounds like you did but it bears repeating). From there it should just be time until it stops feeling uncomfortable.
In the interim, you could take something OTC to manage the pain, if appropriate. Motrin/ibuprofen/paracetamol, whatever you've got on hand to deal with aches and pains. That should help you deal while it's actively hurting, and hopefully by the time the medicine wears off, it'll be back to feeling normal.
Edit: I'm not sure what Destin is - double check to make sure it doesn't interact with whatever pain medicine you take.
franzfurdinand 3 months ago • 100%
In this industry, change is the only constant and your ability to learn, grow, and adapt is going to be more important than any singular technology you can learn.
I can promise you're not as stupid as you may feel you are. You've made it a year, and that means something.
I've been pushing myself hard to get some certifications to really deepen my skill set. You may find that's valuable to you, or you may not. I've found that it's improved my ability to take a step back and understand the systems I'm building from an architectural perspective. It's been helpful for me.
I've helped coach interns and new hires at my company before. I actually like when they ask me questions even if it's something I've answered before, because it shows me that they want to learn. And even better is when they ask "why do it that way?", because it forces me to check my own understanding of the problem set. It also means that I can really dig into the explanation and hopefully they walk away with at least one more tool in their toolbox.
franzfurdinand 3 months ago • 100%
You're right, but I was thinking of the buckets that are basically terrible quality slop that's borderline inedible.
I might still call it a grift because they're asking for payment as "donations" to skirt paying taxes on them. That, and like you said, it's not a great value for what you get. Maybe not pure snake oil, but there's definitely still enough dishonesty involved imo that I'd be comfortable calling it a grift.
franzfurdinand 3 months ago • 100%
Anti-5g dongles? That's new for me, but I consume a lot of these grifts secondhand through a few podcasts I listen to. I might be behind.
Sounds like the bones of a good scam are there though, assuming the anti-5G conspiracy still gets traction and clicks.
Edit: Do you know if someone like bigclive got one? He takes those sorts of devices apart a lot to explain them and I'd love to see what's inside. I just don't want to pay the money for one to fund the grift.
franzfurdinand 3 months ago • 100%
I have a couple from the hip actually, because America has grifting baked into it's soul. In no particular order:
- MMS (Drinkin' bleach)
- Crystal healing (most sellers)
- WitchTok kits (TikTok influencers selling expensive spices)
- Brain pills
- Any product peddled by a megachurch (see the Baker bucket for a great example)
- Chiropractors
As more of these come to me, I'll try to expand the list.
Update: I can't believe I forgot chiros! They turned themselves into a religion at one point to try to dodge medical licensure laws.
franzfurdinand 5 months ago • 100%
And also to misuse a document marked "for official use only", for an exam taken four years ago, on a functionally meaningless aptitude test. It serves a purpose for the military and that's it. And only during intake. You probably wouldn't get in trouble for sharing this doc out in the grand scheme of things, but the US military is collectively a petty removed and they can find ways to make life difficult.
I'm not sure why you choose to be so defensive about an Internet argument, OP, but learning to let go can lead you down a much more peaceful psychological road. The stakes were and are nil. The outcome of the argument changes nothing. Take a deep breath, calm down, and move on.
franzfurdinand 5 months ago • 100%
You could also get yourself a pack of bungee cords. Bungee the bag the same way you'd use one of those bands.
It's the kludgy option, but you'll probably get a bunch of spare bungee cords out of it and those are always useful.
franzfurdinand 5 months ago • 100%
Worth noting is that the feeling of being or doing something "wrong" without much evidence to support it suggests a little bit of imposter syndrome. It's a very, very, very common feeling and is almost expected in any sort of a technical field. I have dealt with it personally and it sucks. The thing that helps me is the knowledge that if I was doing something that wasn't up to the standard or wrong, someone would intervene. Even if it was to just sit me down and tell me "Hey, this sucks and you need to do better".
franzfurdinand 5 months ago • 100%
I cannot imagine the shit fit that people would throw if we tried to implement a secure national identity number. Even the SSN got a lot of backlash for being "the mark of the beast", and that was introduced a little under a hundred years ago.
franzfurdinand 5 months ago • 100%
That looks like either a mobile AA setup, or they're training to use it for indirect fire. The thing I note is how high she's aiming and that's what makes the most sense to me.
Indirect fire is the less likely of the two options, since 1918 is pretty late in the war (they'd gotten the hang of proper artillery by that point instead of MGs for indirect fire). This actually looks like a pretty mobile little AA station.
franzfurdinand 5 months ago • 100%
Sounds like a law office. That's the only place I've ever heard of six minute chunks.
franzfurdinand 6 months ago • 100%
Haha! I had a Mini T as my first one. It was a fun little car!
franzfurdinand 6 months ago • 100%
Check out the Tarmo project. I've been wanting to put one together for a while.
franzfurdinand 6 months ago • 100%
When I hear "glue rocks to it", I feel the urge to post the steering wheel picture. Because that one lives in my head rent free.
It's only tangentially relevant, but still.
franzfurdinand 7 months ago • 100%
I think most generally it's because naval analogues are probably the closest when you're talking about large space-based fighting vessels. The air force doesn't operate aircraft carriers, battleships, or destroyers. The navy, however, does (or did in the case of battleships). Those large sea based vessels often class quite nicely into a lot of sci-fi media for large ships.
The small ships you see are often based off of a carrier equivalent. Even when they're terrestrially based, it makes a lot of sense to streamline your military structure to have just one "space force", rather than trying to break it up into two entities like the "space navy" and "space air force", each with their own standards and logistical supply networks.
franzfurdinand 7 months ago • 100%
I realize I'm reviving a super old post here, but I actually did end up figuring out what it was. I posted a little writeup in here if you're at all curious. You were actually kinda close.
franzfurdinand 7 months ago • 100%
Because I hate when people ask questions and never go back to update their original post when they solve the issue, I'm gonna post an update here and now.
The fix was actually surprising but simple. I ended up moving the second Z axis lead screw carriage mount a bit further towards the motor. That is, the piece that supports the build plate, where it connects to the leadscrew.
Further diagnostics ended up showing me that it was binding, and one of the problems I had later on was that it was binding but only when going up. So I ended up having prints that got progressively more and more stretched out along the z axis.
Moving it to be further in line and loosening a few mount screws to allow the nut to come back to vertical got me to where I needed to be. Hope this helps!
franzfurdinand 8 months ago • 100%
I wish I had something more significant to contribute, but... yeah. Mood.
franzfurdinand 8 months ago • 100%
The print before this one, the blobbing/shreds were tall enough that one grabbed the BLTouch probe and bent it a little. I was pretty mad about that tbh.
I'll double check my connectors. That's a solid shout actually.
franzfurdinand 8 months ago • 100%
I think I'll give that a swing. Thanks for your input!
franzfurdinand 8 months ago • 100%
I think you might be onto something but the other direction. I think it's not moving quite enough per layer.
franzfurdinand 8 months ago • 100%
I haven't run a temp tower. I'm not fully convinced that it won't damage itself so I've been trying to think through it before trying another print.
franzfurdinand 8 months ago • 100%
Yep! It actually extrudes just fine. I'm starting to wonder if maybe my z axis e-steps are just slightly off and it's enough to compound over the course of the print. It seems to hit a certain spot and start grinding itself into the print, which suggests that it might not be moving up enough per layer.
franzfurdinand 8 months ago • 100%
I'd be surprised if it was too cold, but I've heard stranger. This is PETG at 250. I've actually pulled the nozzle and Bowden tube and pushed a very small Allen key through, so it shouldn't be clogged.
Z height is calibrated, and I've calibrated the e-steps for the z axis. I've tried disabling the fade height to see if that was doing something but it didn't seem to make a difference.
I ran through calibrating the extrusion e-steps. It's feeding 100mm when I tell it to do so. I haven't messed with the extrusion multiplier, do you have any information about that?
franzfurdinand 8 months ago • 100%
Yep. I calibrated all the e-steps too. Not just the extruder, but the the movement e-steps as well.
Hey y'all, I managed to hack together a printer from scratch and I'm struggling to get it to print well. It's a CoreXY system that's being controlled by a Octopus 1.1. Dual z screws, the works. I have it moving under it's own power and all. It's able to actually print, but the results are atrocious. I'm just trying to diagnose what's wrong here. ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/aa55ee14-4782-46bc-98b6-7d958ea4e6af.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/cb91e325-c79f-429f-9121-d42eb4564b25.jpeg) The bottom/first layer actually looks kinda good. It's just completely shredding subsequent layers. ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/f60a0b38-344d-4fa6-a62d-d1cd1e279307.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/228c8211-58dd-404b-bfd1-6e365734eca5.jpeg) Any advice would be appreciated!
Howdy y'all, much like the title says, I'm looking to build a Hypercube. I have what was once upon a time an Ender 3 V1 that I've rebuilt with an Ender Extender kit. I'm not happy with the aggressive ghosting I get from the 400x400 bed so I wanted to cannibalize the electronics and build the frame from scratch. I was also planning on keeping the bed since it's got a stick on heater and thermistor that'll work well with the new setup. Hotend too, probably, since it's an all metal Micro Swiss. Any gotchas to look out for? I know belt tension is a biggie once I get it together, but any gotchas to look out for in the build process? I'm not too nervous about throwing together a custom firmware for this, it's not my first custom firmware and I'm a software guy by trade so it's pretty straightforward for me.
I've been putting these things together for a few years now and I wanna show them off a little bit. I originally started making them to solve a problem - I'm kinda tall, and I like having a blanket that can cover me up from my head to my feet. I hadn't found any that could do that, so I started making these 6'x12' blankets. The example here is fleece on top and flannel on the bottom! The heart is my maker's mark. Orange because leggy.