3DBenchy: Difference between revisions
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=External Links= | =External Links= | ||
* | *[https://www.3dbenchy.com/ The Official Website on the 3DBenchy] | ||
*[https://youtu.be/_epwuDI9FBI?si=KmLw_kHOlW41NbV- A Video by the YouTube Channel "3DBenchy" Titled "#3DBenchy - The jolly 3D printing torture-test" ] ( '''~1 Minute Watch''' ) | |||
[[Category: 3D Printing]] | [[Category: 3D Printing]] |
Revision as of 22:15, 26 September 2023
Basics
- The 3DBenchy, often reffered to as simply a "benchy" is a standard test print done for calibration purposes (Both of 3D Printers, and/or for a Material Used in One)
- It combines many aspects of 3D Printing Challenges allowing for many potential issues to be spotted in one print
- It also has the aesthetic of a Small Toy Tugboat
- This makes them less of a "Print, Look Over, then Throw Away", and more of a "Put on a Shelf" for some, however compared to more minimialistic Calibration Prints it uses more material and Machine Time
File
As a Speed Record
- It is often used as a metric for not just how well a printer can print, but also at what speed it does so
- A project around this was created called #SpeedBoatRace (Although "Speed Benchy" and similar terms are also used
- In the more Extreme Examples, something more akin to a "Benchy Like Object" is created due to various artifacts, but nonetheless most Speedbenchies by Fast 3D Printers are below 15 minutes, and some are below 5 minutes!
- Really interesting example of Competitions as Technology Accelorators that has lead to some very interesting designs with Novel Cooling Mechanisms