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Re: 3D printed parts
On 2910 we use 3d parts in non-load bearing places 99% of the time. They typically don't catch on fire but they technically are flammable, so if they get hot enough they can theoretically ignite, however that is a rather extreme case. This year our team has a Rhino Track based drive module, courtesy of Andymark, and when we encountered a problem woth the track pulleys, we 3D printed replacments. These are very large, solid parts, and do support a load, but most 3D prints will not. You should be strategic and limiting in your use of additive construction parts, so as not to reduce your robot's structural integrity.
-Jacob
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"I don't remember how to make that! It came to me in a dream, and I forgot it in another!" -Professor Hubert Farnsworth
"The only difference between science fiction and science is time"
-Dean Kamen
"Sleep is for those who need to close their eyes to dream"
-Jacob Pilch-Bisson
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