Thanks for the reply. Not entirely what I was looking for, though

Quote Originally Posted by curious aardvark View Post
Most slicers only do millimetres,
this is useful to know.

You then wander off into bizarro-land

just sooo much easier for calculations than the bizarre and archaic inches in base 8.
When you're dealing in movements measured in 100th's of a millimetre - having the software convert back and forth between base 8 and base 10 - just makes no sense.

As far as your material thickness goes - 0.25 inches = 6.25 millimetres

I mean it's even difficult to represent measurements in inches in a decimal format.
what on earth is the decimilisation for 3/36ths of an inch ?
Base 8? Can't use decimals with inches? Let's just quietly draw a curtain and pretend it never happened... :-)

If you really can't change your working habits - simply convert your design to mm in turbocad, then save it as a new file with the prefix/suffix: in millimetres.
And use That file to generate your stl's
Worth a shot. I thought I did that once, but it didn't work. User error with TurboCAD, I'm sure. I am surprised that STL files don't seem to have a UOM embedded in them, only the units themselves.

No clue what slicer dremel use - but given the machines are mostly made by flashforge under licence, it might well be a variant of flashprint.
It's based on Cura(?)