Personal Odds and Ends

Printed Aluminium dibond - ~1500mm x 4mm x 1000mm (L x W x H)

SKILLS USED: Adobe Illustrator (First pass was outsourced and then I cleaned it up and made adjustments)

The rolling boulder room had a HUGE impact on me as a kid. Years later I found some of the old blueprints for sale online, and just for the novelty I had to have it. Years after that I finally decided to digitize this one in particular and have it printed on aluminium dibond ~1m tall. It still makes me smile today, and I'll walk through those hallways one day.

Black, white, and blue PETG - 192mm x 25mm x 159mm (L x W x H)

SKILLS USED: SolidWorks, FDM 3D printing

Slightly tongue in cheek, but here is my suggestion for 'Cover Letter 2.0".  Who wants to read a regurgitated job description with a sprinkling of buzzwords anyways.

If a picture is worth 1000 words, is a doodle worth ~350?

Black PETG - 33mm x 36mm x 31mm (L x W x H)

SKILLS USED: SolidWorks, FDM 3D printing, soldering

I modeled, printed, and soldered a Neutrik plug adaptor to fit the terminals of a continuity tester. This allows multi-way switch boxes and strikers to be tested instead of removing each leg of a loom.

Blue PETG - ~300mm x 100mm x 25mm (L x W x H)

SKILLS USED: SolidWorks, FDM 3D Printing

A little ball run toy prototype I made for my friends son Atlas. It is his name in the Star Wars font with an encapsulated ball bearing and a spring plunger built in to the S. The S bend was more aggressive than I expected and caused the ball to lose most of its momentum. A complete re-think was needed for version 2, but I just never had the time.

It was a fun project to learn the limitations of 3D printing on, as well as working out the rolling path and spring plunger mechanism in Solidworks.