• givc 2 hours ago

    This is awesome. I’ve also been playing with OnShape to make lamps and it’s been quite challenging. I also tried Blender but the learning curve is just too steep for me. I like this idea of using Python. I might try OpenSCAD too like someone else suggested.

    Here’s my lamp if you’re curious, printed with a .8 mm nozzle, otherwise it would fail https://imgur.com/a/mRqw1pI

  • Aurornis 2 hours ago

    Cool project. The author used PLA, but for anything near a heat source PETG or ASA would be a better choice. PLA will soften and deform at only mildly elevated temperatures. An LED light strip will generate enough heat to cause normal PLA to warp and droop over time.

    • hessammehr an hour ago

      Good to know about the risk of deformation due to heat from the LED strip. Ours hasn’t visibly warped over the past few months of use, fingers crossed it will last a little while

      • JKCalhoun an hour ago

        Was going to comment similar. Definitely don't want to use these lamp shades with incandescent bulbs (too hot).

        As per drooping over time, perhaps for some of these models the "Persistence of Memory" might apply a nice transform to the shapes.

      • mlmonkey 3 hours ago

        In theory, one should be able to use OpenSCAD to come up with fancy surfaces to 3-D print, right?

        I'm just dipping my toes in 3D printing, with a recent acquisition of a Bambu P2S

        • dole 11 minutes ago

          I was able to take the image of the star-shaped graph from OP, fed it to claude and used this for the prompt: "figure out a good formula or equation for this graph and use it to create the lampshade in openscad. use the graph as the bottom for a lampshade, and taper it all up to center point. leave a hole at the top big enough for a lightbulb fixture to pass through." It did a surprisingly good job of generating the OpenSCAD, STL, and preview renders in-browsers.

          • givc 20 minutes ago

            I used OpenSCAD to create a map of Manhattan. It shows the live location of subway trains. It was surprisingly easy, I struggled a lot with OnShape and Fusion360 trying to do this because there were too many polygons.

            I found that starting with an SVG and extruding from there is perfect in OpenSCAD, but I’m sure I’m underutilizing it a lot.

            I wrote a bit about it here if you’re curious https://hackaday.io/project/202488-manhattan-subway-map/deta...

            • Zarathruster 2 hours ago

              I was in your shoes about a year ago with an A1 mini, getting into OpenSCAD to make my own keycaps.

              If you're getting into OpenSCAD I'd highly recommend getting Belfry ASAP.

              https://github.com/BelfrySCAD/BOSL2/wiki

              I wouldn't really consider using OpenSCAD without it

              • aforwardslash 41 minutes ago

                > In theory, one should be able to use OpenSCAD to come up with fancy surfaces to 3-D print, right?

                Yes, but it is painfully slow. Even perforated patterns are quite slow to generate.

                • MengerSponge 25 minutes ago

                  Aside from Fusion360, is there a Free (or FOSS) cad package that uses breps and is scriptable?

                  Fusion360 is just stupid fast at perforations and sophisticated modeling constructions via its python API. I use it because it works well, but I'd be happier if I didn't have to maintain that Autodesk dependency...

                • hessammehr 2 hours ago

                  I haven't used OpenSCAD much beyond combining primitives. Truthfully these organic shapes are more of a use-case for 3D modelling software like Blender rather than CAD, but I'd be keen to hear if you end up giving OpenSCAD a go.

                  My Bambu A1 mini has been reliable despite the challenging geometry; pretty sure your P2S will work just as well if not better. Good luck!

                • hessammehr 2 hours ago

                  Just noticed that this has made it to the front page, so just had a quick look through to see if there are any broken links, etc. (as I have a habit of forgetting them) and added the missing OnShape link to the LED strip diffuser.

                  Also recommend checking out the live Marimo notebook linked down at the bottom. Incredible what you can do with Pyodide + Marimo these days. I only wish there was a webassembly version of jax to make it easier to share random numpyro experiments.