The joys of parts with not friendly printing geometry. There's another cylindrical recess running at 90 degrees to the one that's visible in this photo.
Apologies for the very obvious layer lines. Harsh direct overhead lighting makes them a lot more obvious. The prints are much better in person, I promise.
Edit: Finished part showing the second cylindrical recess. They're both dimensionally important, which is why the parts weren't printed flat.
Living dangerously would mean that you print the same part 20 times at slightly different orientations, put them all in a bag and pick one at random for a structured part.
Only kinda sorta dangerous, I'm not leaning into chaos random. I'll update the post with a better view of the final part. The two cylindrical recesses are the dimensionally important features and bridging would hurt that.
First try or multiple test prints? Did you manually place each tree support on the half cylindrical overhang? Do you think they were needed, given that the top most point of the half cylinder is the same overhang, or am I seeing a tiny bevel at the point where you reduced the overhang corner?
First try. I'm running klipper with z calibration with a bed mesh, so my first layers are very consistent.
I manually painted the trees in two locations. The first was below the cylinder cutouts even start to give the print a touch more stability, but I probably could have gotten away without them. The second was for the small overhang at the top of the cylinder. This is ASA, which tends to sag on overhangs a bit more than PLA. A bevel would have been a great way to eliminate the need for the second set of trees.
The prints are the middle section of a rebar clamp for my garden. I'll try to post a photo of the completed unit in a day or two. So not a jig per say, but functionally very similar. Good eye!
I was wondering if it was some sort of alignment/clamp for something like pipes or rods, or maybe some sort of bushing/bearing holders (think linear rods). Your tuning looks great btw, look pretty nice even in the worst case lighting conditions, adhesion not an issue doing this way? My dad asked me to print some stuff he designed for his beekeeping tools, has a bearing surface that's awkward to print accurately, I'm probably going to revisit that with this as inspiration, other than the helper ears I see on the build plate anything else you did?
To ask questions, for the application does dimensional accuracy actually matter? AFAIK rebar isn't exactly the tightest wrt tolerances (I know flat products, not long products, but knowing what hotroll coils look like I'm assuming it's similar), could probably have gotten away with a different orientation and could probably have avoided supports (I find arches print nicely). Having said that though, thinking strength might be another reason to print the way you did, face down and you have shear & torsion in between layers, thinking that's still a concern if you printed it standing, but yeah, just thoughts.
Edit: also spy kapton tape, did you find the bubble insulation made much of a difference? I'm putting what's basically heat barrier fabric on the interior as a first try, I grabbed some rock wool and bubble insulation but it's thick enough that I'm mildly concerned with it interfering with the gantry, having everything off for some refurb and wow I forgot just how close everything is, they really didn't waste space eh?