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Saturday 25 March 2017

3D Printing Example...

I acquired a Prusa i3 type 3D Printer kit late last year from ElectronicGeek.com (EG) (Montreal; great printer, good price compared to eBay import for same printer, and great customer service from EG, btw!) The printer works reasonably well as built; the learning curve for solving the problems that occasionally appear is not trivial, but I am making progress.
We decided to use PLA only until we have a very good reason to use something else. Although I have a heated aluminum bed that works well, it is not needed for PLA work so far. I use blue painters tape (from Home Depot) to cover the bed, and get mostly good adhesion, as long as I change the tape frequently (no more than half a dozen prints in the same place, otherwise adhesion starts to become unacceptable).
A recent print that turned out well, was a case for my recently acquired Electronic Device Tester. This device, the LCR-T3-H, is a very versatile Arduino-based tester that handles many different types of 2 and 3 terminal, active and passive components. I've included some photos of several types of components being tested. The particular device I bought is based on a public domain design that is very well documented here: https://www.mikrocontroller.net/articles/AVR_Transistortester .
The case I built is described on Thingiverse here: http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:694790 .
This design was straightforward to print in PLA (despite a small amount of warping from insufficient bed sticking). The pcb is a tight fit, and the display panel backlight connections stick out a small amount past the edge of the pcb, requiring that a small section of the side wall of the case be cut out to allow the pcb to fit in the case. Still works very well.


Top view of case, shows startup info. 


Back view, base removed. ATMEGA386 smt chip, 8MHz crystal, not much else!

Back of case is a tight fit, screws not really needed. Print looks good...

Testing a Cap. One button operation, auto power off, tests battery on power up.

Inductor test.  But very small inductance looks like a Resister...

PNP xistor. also does FETs, SCRs, Diodes, etc. SMT parts too.

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