Cool, how stable is it?
3DPrinting
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You can see in the photo that the wall is just above the waterline. It stays in that orientation until you disturb it enough to spill water over the edge, at which point it capsizes.
That "slicer file is public domain" part would probably not be valid as benchy has a "no derivatives" licence:
If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you may not distribute the modified material.
That overrides the requirement of "share-alike", meaning you have to use the same license for remixed or derived content, as you aren't allowed to release any in the first place.
Unless the creator has received permission from them, of course - that overrides all licences.
So you're saying it's technically a pirate ship?
oof, good luck enforcing that lol, the Benchy's one of the most modified models out there.
Thingiverse at least tries to help a small bit, that's why the remix functionality is disabled on the site for the benchy.
Technically speaking….
They’re both floating. One’s just… upside down,
This is actually cool, but can the project be applied to other models?
The technique can be applied to other models: Use PrusaSlicer's 'cut' feature to break the model into parts, and tweak the settings (mainly infill and perimeters) to give each part the desired density.
Wouldn't it be easier to use modifiers instead of cutting the model?
What exactly are your modifiers modifying?
Edit: oh, I see. A modifier lets you draw shapes onto the model instead of cutting planes only. That does seem like an easier approach.
yeah.... but I wanna hit a button and see it go...
(I mean, I do understand how incredibly hard and difficult that could be. which is kind of why I asked. I'd be very curious about how you implemented that process.)
It's not rocket surgery. Boats need more weight at the bottom than the top. If you put it in water and it leans, shift some weight in the other direction.
PrusaSlicer has a 'center of gravity' indicator that removes at least some of the guesswork.
That’s actually pretty cool