I'd buy a proper camera myself, but the picture is just barely good enough for what I need anyway so I can't be bothered.Īnonymous Thu May 14 11:28:58 2020 No.1820039 Mine gets very good quality at about 1m range or more, it's just that the focus doesn't adjust well enough to use for print monitoring on a z-axis mount. Wasn't bought from an official retailer, cost me a whopping 15$.Įven so I've never seen really good macro pictures from a raspberrycam. It came in an official-looking box and it looks correct, but you know how chinks are.
Really? What the fuck even is the point then lmao, when a webcam costs $10 while the picam is like $25Īnonymous Thu May 14 11:22:26 2020 No.1820032 >mine's the official Raspberrycam and pic related is the closest I can get to good focus adjustment. I was actually gonna get the raspberrycam but maybe not. Unused hours don't roll over from month to month do they? $2 a month for 80 hours doesn't seem too bad, especially if you only use it on bigger prints. Take my advice though and buy a real webcam, mine's the official Raspberrycam and pic related is the closest I can get to good focus adjustment.Īnonymous Thu May 14 11:13:58 2020 No.1820021 It's pretty cool though, detects failure right away.
It's a monthly subscription now, it was only free during the beta test. When I get a webcam that can actually work on my pi I want to try out the spaghetti detective, seems like an interesting feature.Īnonymous Thu May 14 11:09:13 2020 No.1820018įile: 861 KB, 1920x1080, third time is the charm.png The argument to be made is that the oldest 3dpg thread in the catalog hit bump limit 3 days ago and is still alive, so that's why people ask to wait until page 10.īut in the end, you make the threads and I really do appreciate the effort you put into the OP, so I won't get too noisy about it.Īnonymous Thu May 14 10:56:51 2020 No.1820003Īnonymous Thu May 14 11:04:52 2020 No.1820011 The other two reached their bump limit and are on their way to page 10Īnonymous Thu May 14 10:40:07 2020 No.1819987 But the tail is proving tricky since it will overhang the stand and is incomplete.Īnonymous Thu May 14 10:35:08 2020 No.1819985 (I usually put a little cylinder underneath to act as a stand when I prepare a model for 3D printing.
Just need to figure out how to seal the bottom off so it can be printed. My toy squirtle model is mostly fixed up now. Variants of Solidworks, Inventor and AutoCAD may be free depending on your profession, level of piracy and definition of ''free''.Īnonymous Thu May 14 08:23:37 2020 No.1819919 all work, but Blender and Fusion 360 are free for most users, that doesn't include (you). Instead of buying a new printer, you could consider building your own:
SLA: Anycubic Photon, Prusa SL1, Formlabs Form 3, Elegoo Mars Under 500 USD: Creality CR-10, Anycubic Chiron, or Qidi X-One2/X-Smart/X-Maker WiFi 6 is the latest wireless standard and offers faster speeds, but WiFi 5 is still plenty fast-and WiFi 5 routers are frequently less expensive./3DPG/ Anonymous Thu May 14 08:19:52 2020 No.1819916Īll the info you need about 3D-printing: (embed) You might notice that we include both WiFi 5 and WiFi 6 models. The models featured here, from Eero, Google Nest, Netgear, and TP Link, are among the best mesh routers based on CR’s latest testing, listed in order of Overall Score. We measure how well they perform across a range of criteria, including how fast they transmit data at a variety of distances (also known as their throughput), how easy they are to set up, and how well they protect your privacy and security. These might not have all the bells and whistles of their slightly more expensive counterparts, but they provide a real value for many consumers.Įvery year, Consumer Reports tests dozens of wireless routers. In fact, around half of the 41 mesh routers in our ratings cost $250 or less.
While the best mesh routers used to routinely cost around $500, today you can buy reliable models for less than half that. You might, for example, place the base station in the kitchen and the satellite units in a bedroom, study, or den-pushing the WiFi signal where you need it most.