Pirating lego is not worth the effort
Pirating lego is not worth the effort
I had some missing LEGO bits, so I found the components on ldraw.org, converted to STL with LDView, and butchered them together with Fusion360.
In this case, I merged 3 parts into one, so I'd only have to deal with 1 interface instead of 5. The sanding probably made it worse.
Wet sanding (with appropriate sandpaper) makes a huge difference, especially for smaller grid sizes.
But it’s probably easier to just get some individual pieces from Bricklink.
9 0 ReplyMight look better with a coat of primer and paint
8 0 ReplyNot really pirating IMO
8 0 ReplyI know it's not the point of the post but I still wanted to mention PrintABloks
These are made specifically for 3d printing and I just think they're cool and better for our community :)
7 0 ReplyThat and the creator of PrintABloks (3D Printing Professor) is a great and passionate dude
2 0 Reply
Due to the relatively small size and overall complexity/tolerances required for the object, I wonder how it would have turned out if done on an SLA printer.
5 0 ReplyYeah the tolerances on LEGO are high enough you really need a resin printer for good results.
5 0 Reply
How is the clicky-ness? Does it snap to regular LEGO well?
4 0 ReplyIt fits well enough to hang upside down, but I didn't do much fine tuning. https://github.com/paulirotta/PELA-blocks#calibrate would probably work better for generic brick shapes.
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If it was that easy, Lego would've gone out of business years ago
4 0 ReplyI had the same experience. While I was very happy with the "clickyness", the color and the feel, it just takes to long to produce enough parts (FDM with 0.25mm nozzle and 0.05mm layers)
4 0 ReplyWhat did you print it with?
3 0 ReplyEnder 3 S1, with Klipper on a Raspberry Pi.
3 0 ReplyI wonder how it would turn out with a resin printer.
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I’ve had the same experience. Not worth it and too much of a hassle to calibrate for proper snap.
2 0 ReplySeems like this would be better suited for creating a resin cast.
I've seen people 3d print Lego, bit it's usually scaled up to gigantic proportions
2 0 Reply