
- PROJECT MAGENTA PMMODEL HOW TO
- PROJECT MAGENTA PMMODEL UPGRADE
- PROJECT MAGENTA PMMODEL PRO
- PROJECT MAGENTA PMMODEL PROFESSIONAL
She had launched the first training session organised in La Trinité-Sur-Mer last May.
PROJECT MAGENTA PMMODEL PROFESSIONAL
She is a founding member of the Magenta Project, 1 st international sports network of professional female sailors. Thank you to Leyton for giving female sailors such an opportunity“ Elodie-Jane Mettraux I’m really excited to get the boat to the Mediterranean, it will be a new sailing experience with new things to learn. The crew is great, I feel very lucky to be here. “I’ve learned so many things, it’s an extremely rich experience to understand how an Ocean Fifty works. Swiss female sailor, Elodie-Jane Mettraux, number one on the crew, comments on this rewarding experience:
PROJECT MAGENTA PMMODEL PRO
The Leyton Sailing Team finished the 3 rd episode of the Pro Sailing Tour in Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, with another victory.
Troy Schrapel has updated the project titled TMS9918 Emulator Library.Photo credit : Anne Beaugé / Leyton Sailing Team. jeremy laratro liked Inexpensive function generator. Nicolas Tremblay started following Pick and Place Hack Chat. jonnyr wrote a reply on New PCB For Calculator Watch. Idrees Hassan has updated components for the project titled Working "Teeny-Tiny Turntable". Keith has updated the project titled Antique PAL reading system. Dan Maloney wrote a comment on Cyberdeck1. eng liked Microfluidics via Maskless Photolithography. Sam on Fluke DMM Hack Adds One Digit To Model Number. jaseg on Crimping Tools And The Cost Of Being Cheap. sutechshiroi on Crimping Tools And The Cost Of Being Cheap. HaHa on Crimping Tools And The Cost Of Being Cheap. PROJECT MAGENTA PMMODEL UPGRADE
TimT on 1960s Stereo Console Gets An Upgrade. Chris Lott on Remembering The MIT Radiation Laboratory. sdfdsfdfs on Is Your Flashlight A Lumen Liar? Build A DIY Integrating Sphere. Anonymous on Crimping Tools And The Cost Of Being Cheap. BadAngel on Crimping Tools And The Cost Of Being Cheap. Hackaday Podcast 154: A Good Enough CNC, Stepper Motors Unrolled, Smart Two-Wire LEDs, A Volcano Heard Around The World 1 Comment Posted in Peripherals Hacks Tagged 3 axis, 3d, how it's made, ink jet, inkjet Post navigation There’s no better name for that than the Magic Paintbrush. Looking for other ways to abuse ink jet parts? came up with a way to make them handheld so you print on anything from latte foam to your buddy’s forearm. Watching this segment made us so excited to think of the person/people who got to hack this rig together as part of their job. We’re not experts in all the available consumer ink-jet printers out there, but finding a setup where the heads are separated from the reservoirs would be key. It seems like the trick is to get the heads to have as small of a footprint as possible for clearance when printing in sloped areas. In the How It’s Made episode, buildings and other structures are then 3D-printed and added. The final step after printing is a protective clear coat. Another coat of an undetermined material (“a specialty coating to receive the ink”) gets the piece ready for the ink. The model is very carefully cleared of debris before being sprayed with primer. Part of what makes this work is the post-processing steps that follow milling. Since the height at any point on the work material is already known from the milling process, four ink heads (black, cyan, magenta, yellow) have been added to individual Z-axis actuators, applying a raster image as they traverse the surface. It’s a custom rig that a company called Solid Terrain Modeling built for this purpose. But the application of color printing to those surfaces is what caught our eye this time around. It’s easy enough to envision how the elevation is carved out of foam by a CNC. The segment shows terrain models - think of the physical contour map under glass that you might see at a National Park or at the main lodge of a ski resort. PROJECT MAGENTA PMMODEL HOW TO
We spend a lot of time thinking of how to create 3D objects, but what about being able to print full color graphics on the objects we create? This isn’t just multicolor, this is full-color! Here’s one elegant solution that uses ink jets to print full color images on 3D terrain models.Īdmittedly we are very late to the party on this one as the technology was spotted on season 22, episode 7 of How It’s Made that aired way back in 2013.