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  1. #1
    Senior Engineer
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    You must be a very lonely or sad person to take a joke about "what you are smoking" as a personal abusive attack. I shall refrain from such posts in future and apologize for not being aware of your lack of sense of humour.

    Please note, the above is not any kind of attack or abusive post it is merely a conclusion I draw from your posts. Do not take it to heart, do not be upset by it. If it bothers you then perhaps you should stop reading forums because the world is a big place with many people in it and most of them have some sense of humour.

  2. #2
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    This is a product that I have wanted for over 25 years, but never seen in stores. It is an ant-proof pet food bowl for use outdoors. Visualize a bowl on top of a saucer. The bowl contains pet food. The saucer contains soapy water, a contact killer for ants. I have used the bowl & saucer combination, but it is unsatisfactory. A 1-piece design is preferable. Problems to eliminate: Pets bump into the bowl and spill the contents. Bowl knocked over and ants invade the pet food. Bowl and saucer both knocked over, spilling soapy water into the pet food. Pet's sloppy eating drops dry pet food into the saucer, dry food absorbs soapy water emptying the saucer and providing a path for ants. Leaves dropping and providing the ants an alternate path to the pet food; maybe need a separate cover to keep leaves out but allow pets in; cover should align the bowl so that bumping either the bowl or the cover does not provide a path for ants, does not block pet access to bowl; cover must be removable for human servicing of bowl & saucer. Rain turns dry pet food into a mushy moldy mess; solved by the cover.
    Last edited by Daniel Ross; 10-11-2014 at 04:01 PM. Reason: add 1 problem to eliminate

  3. #3
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    My mother was hard of hearing. She spent $200 each ear for hearing aids. Then she spent $600 each ear for better model hearing aids. 1985 dollars. I suggested using ordinary plastic kitchen funnels as ear trumpets. No batteries to replace. No squealing when the volume control was set too high. Good frequency response over speech frequencies. My mother was too self-conscious to use funnels. Many people in the world live on $2 per day. They cannot afford hearing aids or the luxury of being self-conscious. There is need for an ear trumpet that is self-supporting on the ear, so the wearer does not have to dedicate a hand to holding the trumpet in place.

  4. #4
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    Prince Rupert's drops have the shape of raindrops. These days they are made by heating the end of a soft glass rod with a Bunsen burner. When the glass melts, it is allowed to drop into a bucket of cold water from a height of about 4.5 feet. Usually the glass drop shatters when it hits the water. But occasionally the glass hardens, forming a Prince Rupert's drop. Surface tension makes the glass very hard. The head of the drop can withstand being hit with a hammer; a really strong blow will just dent the hammer. But the tail of the drop shatters easily, causing the entire drop to shatter.

    So far (about 350 years), the drops have been just a novelty. Each drop has a unique shape. There has been no way to protect the sensitive tail from shattering the entire drop. Digitizing each drop and 3D printing a customized holder that protects the tail, could enable exploitation of the extreme hardness of the head of the drop.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Rupert%27s_Drop

  5. #5
    Super Moderator Geoff's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Daniel Ross View Post
    Prince Rupert's drops have the shape of raindrops. These days they are made by heating the end of a soft glass rod with a Bunsen burner. When the glass melts, it is allowed to drop into a bucket of cold water from a height of about 4.5 feet. Usually the glass drop shatters when it hits the water. But occasionally the glass hardens, forming a Prince Rupert's drop. Surface tension makes the glass very hard. The head of the drop can withstand being hit with a hammer; a really strong blow will just dent the hammer. But the tail of the drop shatters easily, causing the entire drop to shatter.

    So far (about 350 years), the drops have been just a novelty. Each drop has a unique shape. There has been no way to protect the sensitive tail from shattering the entire drop. Digitizing each drop and 3D printing a customized holder that protects the tail, could enable exploitation of the extreme hardness of the head of the drop.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Rupert%27s_Drop
    Sorry Dan, you have lost me now...
    Hex3D - 3D Printing and Design http://www.hex3d.com

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Geoff View Post
    Sorry Dan, you have lost me now...
    I assume you mean lost sympathy, not lost intellectually. Any further posts will have clear immediate application.

  7. #7
    Super Moderator Geoff's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Daniel Ross View Post
    I assume you mean lost sympathy, not lost intellectually. Any further posts will have clear immediate application.
    Hi Daniel, I am going to leave the thread. I think now I feel like the one who is copping abuse.

    I was simply saying you lost me now, not for poking fun, not for being 'sympathetic' nor intellectually lost. To clear it up, I was just wondering how we got from the hearing aids to the prince ruperts drops. The hearing aid was on track with the theme of the thread in 3D printing advancements and how we can use this technology to better the world..

    ... . then the ruperts drops, as fascinating as they are, did not connect the dots for me for any of the other topics we have discussed so far in this thread. Is that a bit clearer? if I missed something I apologize.

    Anyway, Good luck with your myriad of ideas, hopefully one of them will come to fruition.
    Last edited by Geoff; 10-11-2014 at 09:13 PM.
    Hex3D - 3D Printing and Design http://www.hex3d.com

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Daniel Ross View Post
    funnels as ear trumpets
    Design improvement. Around the large end of the funnel, provide screw threads for an optional add-on attachment. The attachment is a hollow cylindrical tube with slots cut around the side, vaguely similar to a gun silencer. The principle is the same as for a shotgun microphone, causing extreme directivity at the cost of some of the funnel's acoustic gain. Compromise directivity vs. loss.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microph...ic_microphones
    Last edited by Daniel Ross; 10-13-2014 at 10:40 PM. Reason: audio -> acoustic

  9. #9
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    In most of my clothes and luggage that have zippers, the zipper is the first component to fail. There is need for zipper design improvement. The zipper is a mature product. Design improvement may be impossible.

    There are 2 sources of zipper failure, one in the slider and one in the teeth.

    Slider failure occurs when the crosspiece between the inside and outside parts of the slider, bends. The inside and outside parts of the slider separate slightly. The teeth are not forced together sufficiently to make them interlock completely. A sturdy U-shaped cover over the slider, attached after the rest of the zipper is assembled, and glued to both the inside and outside parts of the slider, would prevent bending and separation of the slider.

    Tooth failure occurs when meshed teeth separate spontaneously. Look carefully at the Wikipedia diagram of the teeth. It appears that the teeth do not mesh smoothly. That may be fact, or it may be a deficiency of the diagram. In the mid-20th century there was mathematical derivation of the optimal curve for meshing of gear teeth. I think the derivation also would apply to meshing of zipper teeth. Investigation needed.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipper


    3D printer would be used for experimentation and prototyping, maybe on a scaled-up model.

  10. #10
    Engineer Marm's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Daniel Ross View Post
    In most of my clothes and luggage that have zippers, the zipper is the first component to fail. There is need for zipper design improvement. The zipper is a mature product. Design improvement may be impossible.

    There are 2 sources of zipper failure, one in the slider and one in the teeth.

    Slider failure occurs when the crosspiece between the inside and outside parts of the slider, bends. The inside and outside parts of the slider separate slightly. The teeth are not forced together sufficiently to make them interlock completely. A sturdy U-shaped cover over the slider, attached after the rest of the zipper is assembled, and glued to both the inside and outside parts of the slider, would prevent bending and separation of the slider.

    Tooth failure occurs when meshed teeth separate spontaneously. Look carefully at the Wikipedia diagram of the teeth. It appears that the teeth do not mesh smoothly. That may be fact, or it may be a deficiency of the diagram. In the mid-20th century there was mathematical derivation of the optimal curve for meshing of gear teeth. I think the derivation also would apply to meshing of zipper teeth. Investigation needed.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipper


    3D printer would be used for experimentation and prototyping, maybe on a scaled-up model.
    Or buy items with YKK produced zippers. Lifetime warranty.

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