The toe slider on my bindings broke, and because it’s an older board made by 5150, I wasn’t able to find a replacement. So, I used the still good one and modeled it up. It’s a piece that doesn’t undergo too much stress from bending, so 3D printing works. The more infill you use, the stiffer the piece is. I found that 37% triangular infill worked well.
I put the toe slider on my front binding since I’m not strapping and unstrapping that one as much as the back. After a day on the slopes, I didn’t see any tearing or breaking, it worked great! I made a few copies with kevlar interwoven with the plastic, but the straight plastic pieces were tough enough, and ended up being what I used.
This article was first featured at https://ift.tt/30yK90t on January 15, 2020 at 01:34PM by d-man5005
More Stories
Can this possibly be true? “Metal 3D printing is now possible on any 3D printer…with the right settings and a few minor upgrades like a hardened steel nozzle…” – July 2 2023 at 04:59PM
New NASA Funding Ignites 25 3D Printing Projects in Space Exploration – June 18 2023 at 04:34PM
Nvidia AI produces 3D models from 2D videos 3D printing applications forthcoming? – June 15 2023 at 02:55AM