Meet the Maker Part II

GoPro cameras are pretty awesome things.  They’re durable (by camera standards) waterproof cameras that are small enough that you can put them just about anywhere to get cool shots we could only dream about a few short years ago.  Yet actually mounting a camera in some of the places that would make for a really unique shot can be an engineering challenge in actually making it happen.  Sometimes, you just need to make your own mount- and using a 3D Printer like the TAZ 6 happens to be the perfect way to do it.

There are exactly 2.4 kabillion companies out there who make no less than 9.33 zillion mounts and accessories for GoPro cameras.  Yet cameras can still end up looking like this—ask me how I know.  Suction cups and sticky mounts can work really well, but they can also cause your GoPro to jump ship, which is what brought Chazz Layne to me asking for a help with a GoPro mounting solution.  Chazz asked me to come up with a magnetic mount for a GoPro, so that he could stick a camera to literally any ferrous metal surface in his vehicle and capture all kinds of shots from time lapses while wrenching to axle-cam shots while rallying.

Since I needed to make these new magnetic mounts work with the GoPro ecosystem of mounts and accessories, it made sense to do a little bit of extra work and model all of the parts that I would need to make ANY GoPro part I could dream up.  A set of calipers and a few genuine GoPro mounts to measure off of were all that I needed to reverse engineer what I’m going to call the three-prong, and two-prong GoPro mounts in a CAD program.

All of the screen captures you’re going to see here are from SolidWorks, but any CAD program that can output a STL file will work great.  The design-build process from reverse engineering to printing is going to be the same no matter what CAD program you use.  Check out the first article in this series for a couple of free CAD programs to use.  Once I had my three-prong and two-prong mounts modeled, I made a test print of each to make sure that I had all of the dimensions correct, and that my parts worked properly with the genuine GoPro parts.  When you’re working with interference fits (like capturing the acorn nut) or when you’ve got parts that mate to one another, a test print it always a good call.

Now that I have the three-prong and two-prong mounts modeled correctly, I can put them on literally anything else I can dream up, so I started working on a magnetic base, and came up with two designs.  The first is a base that is designed to work in applications where the mount isn’t going to be bouncing around particularly hard: shooting timelapses, gentle driving, etc.  I focused on creating a smaller footprint and protecting the magnets, which can break if they hit something hard enough.  Once I had my base, I added the three-prong GoPro mount, saved the model as a .STL and loaded the model into Cura, the printer control software for the TAZ 6.

Cura is a great program to work with, and the process of going from CAD model to print can be as easy as choosing the type of print you want (standard / high speed / high detail) and whether or not you need support material or a brim and hitting go.  Cura’s filament profiles are the result of countless hours of testing by the folks at Lulzbot, and as a result their printers are as close to a plug-and-play printing solution as you can get.  However, Cura can also nerd out—if you want to tweak every last setting of a given print profile, simply flip over to expert mode where you can change any variable.  Once you have your settings dialed, you’ll load the model(s) you want to print, which will appear in the build area.  If you need to change the model’s orientation, simply use the rotate button in the bottom left corner to rotate the model on any of the three axes.  Moving a model is as simple as clicking and dragging.  When you’re happy with everything start your print and kick back and enjoy the stepper music.

The second design I came up with has twice as many magnets so that it will stay in place during aggressive driving, impacts, or greater wind loads.  I kept with the design style from my first mount and added spots for additional magnets. To protect paint and other surfaces that are prone to scratching, I applied a thin layer of silicon caulk to the base of the mount that can be easily wiped clean and will provide a little bit of additional grip.  While the prints were running, I modeled another GoPro part that I’ve been wanting to make, and it’s here were modeling the two-prong and three-prong mounts really paid off.

I’ve always wanted a mounting arm that was longer than the sub-two-inch arms that GoPro makes, so I designed a truss, and added my three prong, and two-prong mounts to the ends, and voila! I had a six-inch GoPro mounting arm.  While the truss looks cool and helps keep the weight down, it does pose a challenge for a 3D Printer in that there are sections where the printer would have to print into thin air, so I knew going into this print that I would have to use support material to get good results.  Support material uses more filament, and you have to go through and clean all of the support material off post-print, but this is how you can make parts that otherwise couldn’t be printed.  With all of my models now existing as physical parts, it was time to stick them to Project Trundra, and see what happened out in the dirt.

I started easy, and worked my way up.  Static shots and time lapses turned into moving shots of spirited driving down dirt roads.  Smarter me would have used safety lanyards while testing these mounts, because everything has its limits, and even magnetic mounts can be knocked off of something if they’re subjected to a great enough load.  Yet, by the time I turned back onto pavement, I still had all of my gear.

The real value of magnetic mounts is that they do not need a perfectly clean surface to stick to, like an adhesive mount or suction cup requires, and that makes magnetic mounts a great tool for run and gun shooting where you want to quickly setup a camera and get back to having fun.  Overall, the magnetic mounts worked great, and I’m excited to pass these parts on to Chazz.

3D Printing is such a powerful technology, and having a TAZ 6 is like having an entire workshop full of expensive tools and skilled craftsman at your disposal—except this workshop takes up just a few square feet on your desk.  With a measuring device or two, a little bit of planning, and some time spent in a CAD program, you can reverse engineer just about anything with a TAZ 6.  Likewise, when you’re creating new things, 3D printing can turn that brainstorm or bar-napkin sketch in to a real functional thing.

For our last article in this series, we’re asking you, our readers to let us know in the comments below what you would create for yourself if you had a TAZ 6.  Anything aside from weapons is fair game here.  The American Adventurist staff will pick our favorite ideas, and then I will work on making those ideas into printed parts.  We will open-source the files and send built parts to the folks who came up with the ideas.  Let’s hear what you want to see made!

Meet the Maker

When I was a child, I often found myself wishing there was a tool that I could use to create the all of the random things that a child’s mind could conjure up.  One day I would find myself wishing for some LEGO piece that I didn’t have, and on another, I needed one more part for some project I was working on.  Yet, now that I’m an adult this tool that I’ve opined for since my youth exists, and it’s called a 3D printer.  Specifically, it’s called the TAZ 6, made by Loveland Colorado-based LulzBot.  With the TAZ 6, I can create nearly anything that I can dream up, and that capability allows me to solve a world of problems and improve countless experiences for myself and others.  This is the first part in of a series of articles that will teach you how to use a 3D Printer and how to create things that will be of value to you.  Let’s dig in.

The TAZ 6 is an amazing machine, and working with it is hands down the best 3D printing experience I’ve ever had.  In a few minutes, you can have the printer unboxed, setup, and working on your first print.  Bed leveling, filament profiles, and all of the other things that can take up so much time and scare away new users are all automatically handled by the printer.  The TAZ 6 also has a massive print volume (280mm x 280mm x 250mm) that allows you to print some truly impressive things.  Just type 3D printer into Google, and take a look at the print volumes of a few other printers on the market and you’ll get what I’m on about.  Not only is the feature list on the TAZ 6 impressive, but the underlying support for the printer is outstanding as well.

A self-leveling bed, and a nozzle wiper are just a few of the features that making printing with the TAZ 6, a great 3D printer experience.

A massive print volume lets you print a number of parts all in one go.  To see what these parts make, look below.

In a world where more and more products are made and supported overseas, LulzBot printers are designed, built, and supported in Colorado.  If you have a question, LulzBot has great tech support that is just a phone call or email away to answer any questions you may have.  I can’t emphasize just how valuable this support is.  In the time that I’ve had the TAZ 6, I’ve made numerous calls to LulzBot and challenged their tech support folks with questions where I pretended to be a clueless newbie, on up to advanced topics looking for that last fractional bit of performance in a perfectly dialed filament profile.  In case you guessed where this is going, every correspondence I had was a great and helpful experience.  Rest assured, that if you’re new to this, the folks at LulzBot will help you succeed.

If you’re the type of person who loves to experiment and tinker, a few clicks in Cura, the printer companion software, will open up all of the expert settings for the printer where you can tweak and experiment to your heart’s content.  The entire LulzBot ecosystem is open-sourced and LulzBot provides you all of the part files and software code for you to play with at will.  Speaking of printer parts, the only thing that I can find on the TAZ to complain about is the design of the filament roll holder—and this is a very minor nit-picking complaint.  The filament roll holder will loosen its self when you move it to the open position, and when you place your roll of filament on the holder, the holder will now slip down the printer frame.  It’s nothing that a quick snugging with an allen wrench can’t fix, but it’s one extra thing to keep tabs on.

The TAZ 6 is made from a number of 3D Printed parts.

How It Works:

The TAZ 6 is what’s called a Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF) 3D Printer.  This type of printer extrudes a melted filament onto a build surface, and just like a skyscraper is built floor-by-floor, the printer extrudes the filament layer-by-layer to create your part.  The printing process is actually pretty easy; first you use computer design software to design your part or you can download a pre-designed file from a website like thingverse.com Once you have your part(s) designed or downloaded, you load your model(s) into the printer software, where the model is sliced—think of making a plan for each floor in the skyscraper.  From there you take the sliced print file and load it into the printer, and just as a skyscraper is built from the garage to the penthouse, the printer lays down the successive layers of filament to create your print.

Designing A Thing:

You can use any Computer Aided Design (CAD) program that can output a .STL file to design your things.  Some great, free, open-source options are Blender and FreeCAD.  Or you can use a purchased program like SolidWorks.  Whatever program you choose, there are a few things that you need to bear in mind when you’re designing a thing.  Since FFF printers build things layer-by-layer from the print bed up, any part of your print that has an overhang needs to be carefully considered.  The best practice is to print at angles that are 45 – 90 degrees from the print bed.  Yet, if you need to print something that has features that are less than 45 degrees from the print bed, the printer software can add in support material to support the overhanging features as they’re printed.

The same “T” printed with and without support material.  The “supported T” with part of the support material removed is shown below:

Just as scaffolding is used to support a structure that is being built, support material will hold up the overhanging elements of your print.  Another way that you can avoid overhangs is to change the orientation of the print on the print bed as shown below.  With proper orientation, you can avoid bridging gaps and overhangs that would otherwise create filament spaghetti.  As long as you consider how the model you’re designing or downloading is actually going to be printed, you can print just about anything.

The photo above shows how the printer will handles various overhangs.  Angles and radii will produce good results (as shown on the “O” and the “V”), but you’re gambling when you bridge a gap, (note the sagging, shown on the “H”) and you will make filament spaghetti if you start printing into thin air (like on the “T”).  The best way to print these parts would be to lay them down on the print bed as shown below:

A TAZ 6 changes how you see the world.  Where you would historically find yourself scratching your head to solve a problem, you’ll now go print the thing you need to solve your problem.  Here are few exmples of things that I’ve made with the TAZ 6 to solve problems and challenges out in the world and around the home.

Broken Oven Parts

A good buddy was repairing an old oven when he accidentally broke the parts that held on the door cover.  His first reaction was to google for replacement parts, but his oven is no longer made, and parts were not stocked anywhere.  With a handful of broken parts, he came to me and asked if I could reverse engineer a few new brackets for him.  With a pair of calipers and a few revisions to make sure I had the dimension exactly the same as the original, I was able to create a replacement part that worked out great.

Gamut Roller

Another case of parts no longer being made for a given product, I 3D printed a few of these chain rollers to replace the factory one when it broke.  In less than an hour, I had measured the broken part, drawn it in CAD and had the TAZ 6 working away on a couple of new rollers.

Phantom Angel Box

This is a great example of how awesome a large build volume is.  I use this tool to place my expensive drone batteries at a storage voltage, because drone batteries are very particular about what cell voltage they’re left at.  This tool uses delicate lightbulbs, and has a number of parts that have to go with it, so a box that organizes everything and protects the tool was an obvious thing to make.  Now I have one easy to transport box that protects my kit.

Nalgine Thread to Sea-To-Summit Adapter

Ever wanted to make one thing mate to another thing?  With a TAZ 6, you can easily whip up an adapter to mate your water filter to an awesome ultra light water bag from Sea-To-Summit.

3D printing is an amazing technology that is really only limited by your imagination in terms of the problems you can solve and the things you can print.  There are folks out there who use 3D Printing to make everything from wearable StormTrooper armor to prototype parts for vehicle restoration – the applications are quite limitless.  At the top of the pile of desktop printers is the TAZ 6 – its just that good of a printer, and I’ve never had a better experience with a 3D printer in the five plus years I’ve been using them.  Add in the support from the folks at LulzBot and the open source community, and the TAZ 6 becomes an even more valuable tool.

In the next article in this series, we’re going to be using the TAZ 6 to make few things for another American Adventurist member to show how the TAZ 6 3D printer is an invaluable tool for our community.

For more information on the TAZ 6, or the other printers that LulzBot makes, head over to lulzbot.com.  Not all filaments are created equal, and the reason the TAZ 6, is about as close to plug-and-play as you can get a 3D Printer to be is because LulzBot carefully chooses, tests, and then creates dialed filament profiles for the filaments they’ve found to work well.  Save yourself the hassle, wasted time and materials and use the filaments they recommend, which you can check out here.  We’ll talking more about filament choices in the next article.  For reference:  All BLACK filament appearing in this article is PolyLite PLA.  All RED and NEON GREEN filament in nGen.  All ORANGE filament is Inova-1800.  If you have questions on any of this stuff, get in touch with the folks at LulzBot, and they’ll help you out.

Stormtrooper image from Google.