Yea people who downvote this comment must not know Hasan. Occasionally like in this case, he does say the right thing. But much more often he does not. His whole shtick is trying to say the right thing that will get him the most attention for any given situation without having any actual moral or ethical consistency. He will say anything if he thinks it will get him a follow..
Canadian engineer here. Although we use the metric system in principle, in reality we use feet and inches for everything. There are lots of benefits to using base 12 for measurements.
The number 12 has six factors, which are 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, and 12. It is the smallest number to have six factors, the largest number to have at least half of the numbers below it as divisors, and is only slightly larger than 10. (The numbers 18 and 20 also have six factors but are much larger.) Ten, in contrast, only has four factors, which are 1, 2, 5, and 10.
I get the Europeans hate it though because only the people who live near Chernobyl can count to 12 on their fingers.
What happened with the big hack of the ice database with officer identities and then there was a "Russian" DDoS attack that stopped people from downloading it. Did they succeed in shutting that down I guess?
I feel like this would be pretty good. Toast is pretty good. So you just make some good toast and then you sandwich it between some fresh soft bread. And then you have this soft outside with a crunchy buttery caramelized toast inside, I think it could be good if you were craving some toast and wanted to jazz it up.
That was my theory because of the damaged hexagons on your original print. Something was causing the plastic from the previous layer to be too high and the nozzle hit it while travelling.
You could also play with your travel settings. Combing may be undesirable on this type of print.
Maybe curling can be reduced by drying your filament, but I haven't tried that. Curling seems to happen when the plastic stays molten for too long, often because it is going down too hot or because the nozzle is coming back around for the next layer before the previous layer has cooled enough.
I do not need to take a hard look at this to clearly see that this is a person who does not approach life with the scientific method in mind.
Being a drug addict does not accidentally happen. It suggests a flawed decision making process which should make someone ineligible to be making decisions which affect millions of people.
I don't look down on someone for being a heroin user, but I do trust their decision making process less than I would trust someone who did not make that decision.
I'm going to make up an example with fake words, But if the literal translation of electric fat bike in Chinese to English is "wide windmill of thunder" and you write an article in English about how the Chinese are banning wide windmills of thunder. Yes you have written something in English. No you have not correctly conveyed the meaning to your audience.
They are not banning "fat bikes" as they are known to English speakers. In the Netherlands THEY DONT SPEAK ENGLISH .They use equivalent words to describe things differently and if you translate them 1:1 and convey then to a different audience, you have lost the original meaning.
You can stop screaming now I think drool is coming out of your mouth.
Lmao. What the heck do you mean "everywhere else"? One specific place where they use that word? I think you guys spell it that way to make it more evident that you would say the world with a silly accent.
To prove my point. Here is Google images results for fat bikes
.
Notice how they are all pedal bikes except for a few results which specifically say electric fat bike. I get that the Dutch word for "electric fat bikes" translates to just "fat bikes" in English. But it's not what we call them and it is a mis translation.
It looks to me that more is going on here than just how dry the filament is. I see a lot of deformity on the underside of overhang structures which makes me think that the temp is actually too high for the speed that your printing at. I would guess as the plastic went down it was curling edges upwards into the height of the next layer and eventually the nozzle hit this plastic that was too high causing some damage. What speed are you printing at ? Petg likes to print real slow in my experience. Like 20mm/s or less gives it more time to cool. I go as slow as 5-10mm/s when I'm using a large nozzle, but with a .04 you can go faster. Lowering the nozzle temp will reduce the puddling and curling up effect.
I don't dry filaments because I don't care that much about things being perfect. If my plastic is going down goopy, I just turn down the nozzle temp until it isn't... I've come to accept that things often print better if I set the print speeds to be slow. It gives the layers more time to cool before the nozzle comes back around.
Two Americans with Mexican sounding names killed an American.
Are you sure you don't work for ICE?