It use abs and the finish is very good.
Do you think it'll be possible to make some doubleshot style keycaps ?
I was considering buying one for other purposes, then the idea came out of my keyboards oriented mind

http://www.technologyreview.com/article ... mod=MagOurAbout 20,000 parts made by laser sintering are already flying in military and commercial aircraft made by Boeing, including 32 different components for its 787 Dreamliner planes, according to Terry Wohlers, a manufacturing consultant who specializes in additive processes
You must be right as you seem to know much than me but on the pictures they do have nice objects with some polish needed, but not so much.harrison wrote:again, it's a resolution/cleanup issue. if it's one-color, casting really is the way to go, which is was clickclack does.
i've been following the makerbot progress over the past year, and it's come a HUGE distance in the past year. i would assume that come next year, being able to print your own keycaps would be a reality, but right now... it's not quite there yet.Gilgam wrote:You must be right as you seem to know much than me but on the pictures they do have nice objects with some polish needed, but not so much.harrison wrote:again, it's a resolution/cleanup issue. if it's one-color, casting really is the way to go, which is was clickclack does.
Some experimental extruder tools are very thin like 1 mm.
It has to become thinner indeed before getting a perfect tool
Custom-milling keycaps was the first thing I thought of when I read about Roland’s iModella desktop CNC machine.harrison wrote:[…] it would make far more sense to use cnc to mill your keycaps that it does to extrude them.