Reader small image

You're reading from  3D Printing Blueprints

Product typeBook
Published inAug 2013
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781849697088
Edition1st Edition
Tools
Concepts
Right arrow
Author (1)
Joe Larson
Joe Larson
author image
Joe Larson

Joe Larson, known online as "the 3D Printing Professor," is one part artist, one part mathematician, one part teacher, and one part technologist. It all started in his youth, doing BASIC programming and low-resolution digital art on a Commodore 64. As technology progressed, so did Joe's dabbling, eventually taking him to 3D modeling while in high school and college, and he momentarily pursued a degree in computer animation. He abandoned that and instead became a math teacher, and then moved to software development for 10 years before returning to education, teaching technology in college. When Joe first heard about 3D printing, it took root in his mind, and he went back to dust off his 3D modeling skills. In 2012, he won a Makerbot Replicator 3D printer in the Tinkercad/Makerbot Chess Challenge, with a chess set that assembles into a robot. Since then, his designs on Thingiverse have been featured on Thingiverse, Gizmodo, Shapeways, Makezine, and other places. He currently produces weekly videos about design for 3D printing on his YouTube channel, http://www.youtube.com/user/mrjoesays.
Read more about Joe Larson

Right arrow

Using a caliper


The most common technique for taking accurate measurements is the use of a tool called a caliper, a must have for anyone who models for 3D printing. Calipers measure distance with a high degree of precision and can measure in three different ways; the outside diameter of an object with the outside jaws, the internal diameter with the inside jaws, or the depth with the depth probe at the far end. The easiest kind of caliper to use is the digital type.

Simply turn on the digital caliper, tare or zero the reading while closed, then open the jaws, put the object to be measured between them, clamp it down, and take the reading. It's fast and relatively accurate without much effort. Most models even have a port that can transfer the measurements directly to the computer. But digital calipers have the disadvantage of being more expensive and relying on batteries which when run out eliminate the ability to measure accurately.

If budget is a concern then perhaps a Vernier caliper is...

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
3D Printing Blueprints
Published in: Aug 2013Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781849697088

Author (1)

author image
Joe Larson

Joe Larson, known online as "the 3D Printing Professor," is one part artist, one part mathematician, one part teacher, and one part technologist. It all started in his youth, doing BASIC programming and low-resolution digital art on a Commodore 64. As technology progressed, so did Joe's dabbling, eventually taking him to 3D modeling while in high school and college, and he momentarily pursued a degree in computer animation. He abandoned that and instead became a math teacher, and then moved to software development for 10 years before returning to education, teaching technology in college. When Joe first heard about 3D printing, it took root in his mind, and he went back to dust off his 3D modeling skills. In 2012, he won a Makerbot Replicator 3D printer in the Tinkercad/Makerbot Chess Challenge, with a chess set that assembles into a robot. Since then, his designs on Thingiverse have been featured on Thingiverse, Gizmodo, Shapeways, Makezine, and other places. He currently produces weekly videos about design for 3D printing on his YouTube channel, http://www.youtube.com/user/mrjoesays.
Read more about Joe Larson