FORGE & FILE
Print-in-Place Mechanisms: Design Rules for Moving Parts Without Assembly
The mechanical pencil on your desk holds secrets. Gears, hinges, moving parts—all designed to coexist in tight quarters without assembly. What if your 3D prints could work the same way?
Print-in-place mechanisms are having a moment. No gluing. No frustration. Just designs that come off the bed ready to move. But most first attempts seize up solid because the fundamentals get overlooked. Clearance tolerances measured in fractions of millimeters. Bed squish settings that demand precision. Temperature swings that make or break smooth action.
This episode pulls back the curtain on how working machines actually print. We talk about the magic numbers—the clearances, the layer heights, the obsessive calibration that separates a beautiful paperweight from something that actually functions.
It's about understanding your printer well enough to let it do what it was built for: create movement.
Companion reading: [transistor link]
Ready to print something that actually moves?
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