The 3D Printer Room provides a place to house 3D printers and tools that is free from dust and provides access to multiple printers with a minimal of custom configuration.

Mission Statement

 

3D Printing Should Be Easy.

  1. We want new users to be able to follow a very simple recipe and be able to print right out of the box with little or no training
  2. For intermediate users, we want to provide simple configurations that reliably print most objects with a preference for speed or quality, with training provided to communicate best practices (how to orient a print for strength, etc). 
  3. For advanced users, we want to provide enough documentation and flexibility so that they can experiment with settings (that don't impact other users) so that they quickly find the "happy path" without spending their valuable time chasing down printing problems and wasted print time caused by tweaks with unintended consequences, with information sharing along the lines of a guild.
  4. With the following attributes:
    1. Comfortable: New users should find it easy to get started and not feel intimidated because they know they have enough to be successful at their level.
    2. Discoverable: When a user is ready to expand their knowledge, each step should be easily discovered and manageable.
    3. Stable: The printing environment should be stable, so that a returning user doesn't find themselves spending time figuring out what changed instead of printing.
    4. Available: At least one printer should be available for use at all times, with the user not having to change settings when they next walk into the printer room. When at all possible, all "workhorse" printers will be available.
    5. Supported: Documentation and settings for print software for the workhorse printers is provided.
    6. Flexible: For example, users can hotplug a printer from the print server if they wish to print from USB.
    7. Simple: We don't want to do things that complicate unnecessarily. For example, billing for material used might sound like a good idea. But print speed and material costs actually make 3D printing quite inexpensive. A dehumidified cabinet, and an honor system of "replace filament with what you think we need most" would lead to a cabinet full of various filament colors and types that reflect what is actually needed. Another example: a print server adds management complexity. But it helps us simplify print settings across printers, and allows users to free up their laptop during a print and not risk killing a print accidentally. Both of these help users spend more time printing and less time configuring.

Immediate Needs

Filament

Printers

Print Server