Technically it’s for any printer capable of printing a firearm or the components of a firearm, which is…. every printer. What a bafflingly stupid proposal. If you’re in NY, please call your reps and tell them to oppose this bill.

  • @[email protected]
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    1002 months ago

    It’s not like inkjets produce 2 dimensional ink. I’d love to see someone argue in court that it’s technically impossible to create a non 3d printer

    • @[email protected]
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      82 months ago

      I’m pretty sure there are actual industrial multicolor 3d printers that use an inkjet design

    • @[email protected]
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      12 months ago

      Well achtually…To be pedantic,

      A 3D consumer grade printer is not a true 3D tool since it can only move on 2 axis simultaneously. If you watch your printer closely, as it finishes it’s path around the xy plane, there is a tiny halt as it changes active plane from the xy plane to xz plane, lifts the nozzle, then flips the active back to the xy to go along it’s merry way again to lay down the new layer. And no, the hot new scarf joint is still a single plane movement. Sometimes such machines are incorrectly referred to as 2 1/2 axis because they aren’t true 3 axis.

      Source: I’m an old retired toolmaker. Trust me Bro.

      • @[email protected]
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        42 months ago

        There is vase mode, which lifts the Z axis gradually while printing. This creates one continuous extrusion for the whole print.

            • @[email protected]
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              12 months ago

              It only appears so. It’s flipping the xz and yz planes only as it hits each quadrant. It just does it really fast. Looking closely at the layer lines will show you it’s not a true 3D movement.