Magic Portal Desk Toy

Magic Portal Desk Toy

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Print Profile(2)

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P1P
P1S
X1
X1 Carbon
X1E
A1
A1 mini

0.2mm layer, 6 walls, 25% infill
0.2mm layer, 6 walls, 25% infill
Designer
6.5 h
1 plate
4.8(20)

Optimized for A1 Mini, INCLUDES BEARINGS
Optimized for A1 Mini, INCLUDES BEARINGS
14.9 h
4 plates
5.0(2)

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Released

Description

Demo (Apologies for the sound. It's not that loud in person.)

 

This is a neat little illusion desk toy I designed. As you slide the black slider in the middle up and down, the strange ribbon appears to slide up and down, its ends vanishing into the void.

This print requires two standard skateboard bearings, but everything else is printed, and shouldn't require gluing.

Update: I designed this fast print-in-place bearing which works great for this project.

Printing

I recommend printing this at 0.12mm. You can certainly get away with larger layers everywhere but the screw, nut, and endcap. I wouldn't cheat on those.

There should be enough slop in the design for everything to fit together, but you might want to add XY compensation on the nut to loosen the hole a little bit. Otherwise, you may have to work it back and forth a bit to loosen it up.

I recommend going for four or five vertical walls on the base to make sure the poles are strong. You can definitely get away with less, but it snaps together pretty tight, so you might snap something when working it in.

I recommend black for the base and a contrasting color for the screw (using a filament swap). The black will help to hide where the screw "disappears" into the base. The effect should still look nice in all black though.

Assembly

You'll need two skateboard bearings; one for the top, one for the base. They should press in easily.

Other than the bearings, the CAD file has everything arranged in its final position. Most of the assembly isn't particularly order dependent, but these steps should work:

  1. Snap the bearings into the top and the base
  2. Push the inner bearing insert (the short dowel with a rim on it) into the base bearing. The long side goes into the bearing.
  3. Screw the nut onto the screw. You may need to work it back and forth a bit to get it on, depending on print defects. Be careful on this step not to break the screw (reprint the nut with -0.1 mm XY compensation if it's not working out)
  4. Screw the end cap onto the end of the screw. (Again, XY compensation if it won't go on)
  5. Push the screw assembly down onto the coupling dowel in the base bearing
  6. Carefully line up the top so that the sockets line up with the poles, and the bearing lines up with the end cap. This may take a little oomph. Take it a little bit at a time and get it snapped down tight.

Update: If you have a small printer and want to scale this down, you can use this print-in-place bearing and scale it proportionally. I’ve tried them on the full size version, and they work great. Remember to do some test prints on the pieces that fit together though, and check if you need to add negative XY compensation.

Comment & Rating (27)

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First, what a great illusion! It works well, and the person I am giving it to will appreciate it. I did have a few problems, though. The helix was too tall, so the top piece was unable to be pressed onto the rods. Some judicious sanding and cleanup fixed that problem. The other problem was that the nut was a bit too tight, and the end cap was also tight to the point of not being able to be pressed onto the helix. I probably should have read the Bambu Lab documentation before trying -0.1 and then -0.2mm xy compensation, but I followed your instructions first. So +0.1 xy compensation did the trick. Anyway, Thanks for a great toy! Hmm... apparently I can't upload an image or rate with stars (i'd give 5 if I could). I really wish Bambu Lab would stop discriminating against Linux users.
(Edited)
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Print Profile
0.2mm layer, 6 walls, 25% infill
Layers shifted on my 1st attempt to print the central pillar piece. The shift only occurred on the loose pillar at the very last inch. I remedied this by painting a support tree about an inch in length along the loose pillar, 2 inches from the tip. 2nd print was perfect. The illusion is quite nice in person.
(Edited)
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0.2mm layer, 6 walls, 25% infill
Came out beautiful. I did need to reprint the top screw end cap and I spent about 20-30secs sanding the small dowel to get it to fit in the bearing. The only downside is its VERY noisey, it grates on the layers. Could be due to silk screw but with time this will wear down.
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Used the A1 Mini compatible profile and works well! HOWEVER! DO NOT USE dual/triple silk filament... it will ruin the illusion :) I'm about to reprint the screw...
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0.2mm layer, 6 walls, 25% infill
Printed really nicely and the effect is pretty mind blowing.
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0.2mm layer, 6 walls, 25% infill
Great and accurate!
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0.2mm layer, 6 walls, 25% infill
printed very good, with bearings it was a easy fit
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Print Profile
0.2mm layer, 6 walls, 25% infill
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Print Profile
0.2mm layer, 6 walls, 25% infill
Works great, printed very well. No tolerance issues.
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Awesome
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