

It has held up fine! Super sturdy and not a single doubt in my mind that it will last as long or longer as the original. I can put real heavy loads on it without any issues. I don’t think the layers are a problem in this application.


It has held up fine! Super sturdy and not a single doubt in my mind that it will last as long or longer as the original. I can put real heavy loads on it without any issues. I don’t think the layers are a problem in this application.


Will do! Planning to put some OSB boards up this weekend. Should be a fair test by going through a stack of ten boards.


Printed the same as you, a standing tube. I used PETG for the best layer adhesion. The walls are 3 mm thick solid. It has held up fine so far, but i haven’t had the opportunity to put heavy use on it yet.
I actually thought about it before printing it and my backup plan is to print it at 45 degrees angle with more supports if it doesn’t hold up.


That’s not true either. Byte can be both powers of 10 and powers of 2. When talking about storage devices like hard drives etc. we usually refer to them in powers of 10, but OS’s usually do it in powers of 2. That’s why your hard drive looks smaller than advertised.
Bits are used for flash memory as individual chips. Assembled devices such as RAM and memory cards are advertised in bytes. I’m imagining that the same goes for hard drive platters and possibly disc media as well.


Do you have a link?
As a Swede, this looks like a sad bun from a gas station.


The EU requirement isn’t actually USB-C. It’s whatever USB-IF says is the standard connector. So if USB-C gen2x2 (or wherever they will call it) comes out, that will be what everyone has to implement.
The problem would arise when USB-IF stops being the de-facto innovation driver for peripheral interconnection.


Any specific recipe?
http://kavat.com/ has some quality and ethical leather shoes. They provide shoemaker services for their classic models as well.