Friday 26 April 2019

Making Ultra Expensive Japanese Tea Tins on a Budget

I came home from Japan recently, and one of the motivating factors for me to go there was after visiting Japan House in Kensington, London. It is a beautiful building right in the heart of upmarket London, the items inside are exquisite examples of Japanese products made at the highest standards and of course with a price tag to boot. I remember my eye being particularly fond of some Japanese Tea Tins. I picked one up and almost dropped it on the floor when I saw the price sticker on the bottom. I figured then that I would save that money and just go visit Japan myself and pick up a tin somewhere for a few bucks. It kinda worked out like that.

Here are some of the examples I saw in Japan House London


These ones I really liked but the price tag put me off, I noticed they were standard Tea tins and carefully decorated in hand made paper. Beautiful but out of my budget.
I remember buying a small semi-affordable bottle of room scent and on taking it to the counter, I struck up a conversation with two Japanese ladies who were handling purchases. One was young, one was old, and I spoke to the older lady about the beautiful tins but being shocked by the price, she gave me the dagger eyes which I would later on see a lot more of during my time in Tokyo a few months later. I usually become gung-ho once I can sense disapproval towards me, in people, I tend to take a 'what the hell' approach after this, and I smiled at her, and told her that I prefer Daiso anyway. The old lady walked away from me bitterly, I smiled, and the young lady giggled. It was then I struck up conversation with the young lady, and explained about my Daiso experiences in South East Asia, how it is much more unique than other dollar stores in the western world. She helped me to feel happy to go visit Japan right there.

And that was my story. I of course visited Japan for a while and enjoyed lots, disliked some. I guess it's like that all around the world. But one thing I struggled to find was those damn tins. No exact match, no similar craft stores in all of tokyo. But I did find bare metal tins in Nitori for a few bucks, and I found some authentic Japanese paper in a craft store on Nakamise Shopping Street and I vowed to take them both home and do it myself.

I finally got motivated today, and picked up some glue paste to help me stick the paper to the tin. Here is my experience.

I got my tin, glue and cut some shapes.
The paper came from a book store, it was intended for book covering but I like the colour, pattern, and it was the right dimensions
I glued  a circle for the lid first, cutting the edges like a clock to allow me to stick down the sides neatly.

Then it was onto sticking the big sheet over the edges and main tube.
I let it all dry for an hour, then, with a fresh blade, I cut off the excess at the bottom.
Pressing it all down and smoothing it a bit, I get my Authentic Paper wrapped tea tin, hand picked from various places in Tokyo by yours truly
I don't mind so much that I didn't buy the ones in Japan house, I'm happy that I close my eyes and see the disapproving old counter lady, and I like that each part to it has a story, an adventure, I can recall the sounds and smells of the places in Tokyo as I pick each piece up. Priceless.

Thanks for reading :)

Friday 5 April 2019

Kreg R3 Pocket Hole Jig Clamp Adapters





Update: Now Kreg R3 includes Vacuum Dust Attachment (No More Mess)
I have a cheap 12v Car Vac which I modified to use a 3s lipo






The hose adapter fits nice and snug with both the hose and Kreg R3


The Hose adapter Leaves no mess it all collects in the Vacuum Collector
Drilling pocket holes is easy, and also clean.

I have a 3D printer and I like to use it, if possible to help me from spending money. It can really help sometimes. For example, I own a Kreg R3 Pocket Hole Jig which I use for making angle joints in various types of wood cuts.

It is useful to also have the Kreg Face Clamps and Right Angle Clamps to help you line up and cut the holes without things moving around or having to hold two pieces of wood together with one hand while drilling with the other.

Unfortunately getting both these clamps will set you back around $60.

I found a suitable replacement clamp on ebay for around $7 - Search 9" Locking Clamp Welding Grip Pliers 23cm".
I designed little adapters and printed the parts using my 3D Printer and they turned out ok.

I uploaded them on Thingiverse should you like to give them a try for free.

Thanks For reading :)

Edit: I added a corner Clamp too



Thursday 4 April 2019

3D Printing with Ai on Nvidia Jetson

Having an Nvidia Jetson allows you to explore what is possible for advanced mobile platforms. Most people using 3D printing have explored adding Bluetooth or Wifi, or connecting a Raspberry Pi and using it as a server/client with something like Octoprint. If I go down that route I usually just buy a cheap bluetooth module and connect it to the 3D printer.
What interested me is to see if it is possible to effectively use an ARMv7 Platform to perform the complete 3D Printing process of Object Design, Slicing for Gcode, and 3D Printer Control. Form what I have seen, all the platforms skirt around the first two; it is claimed that ARM platforms are not suited for CAD software, And using a Slicing Program is also impractical. Hmmm Got me thinking. Admittedly, I haven't tried this using a Raspberry Pi, I used a Nvidia Jetson with Tegra GPU.

Don't be fooled this thing can shift.

I have a Nvidia Jetson Board that I have DIY'ed into a cardboard box style monitor which runs on low current DC 12v power, either batteries or power supply works. I modified the board to run Ubuntu 16.04.

Firstly, I installed Repetier Host (Note that is Host and not Server). I installed version 2.1.3 and it worked straight off the bat. It recognises the Nvidia Tegra GPU, and has nice smooth and quick 3D Object rendering.
I am able to connect to the 3D Printer using repetier host just as I normally do.
Then I installed a Slicing application. I am mostly familiar with Slic3r so I installed that. It too also works just fine. Slicing takes about the same time as my laptop, I tried it out with the Boat file.
Slicer Version 1.2.9 with Repetier Host Version 2.1.3

Positives:

-Both Repetier Host and Slic3r install Just fine, for me no hangs or errors.
-3D rendering and lighting is super using the Nvidia Jetson Tegra GPU
-The experience is the same as using a laptop
-The software is Free

Things I would like to see:

-I hope one day Repetier Host implements a multi-threading option, as it seems that in System Monitor it uses only two CPU threads
-Likewise, I would like to see a Slicing platform such as Cura or Slic3r that implemented the Tegra GPU for processing as I believe it will run very very fast.

What about CAD design? Well, for beginning this experiment, I chose TinkerCAD as it uses WebGL in Chromium Browser and the Jetson GPU handles that just nicely. There is a good list discussion for CAD Linux software here.



Repetier Host also now has a good function which checks if the STL object is manifold and will repair it for you automatically, so bad CAD design skills are ok.

So what now, that we have full 3D Printer platform running on an embedded AI system? Why, we can run Ai code. 

Perhaps we can put a nice tracking selection on the 3d printer extruder and use OpenCV to track the hotend so to ensure the 3d printer switches off and cools should it fail during the print process. A safety feature.
It could also perhaps be used to try and identify the printed object during the print process, a little bit of creative fun.

It leads to the question: Does a drone have to fly? 

Can it be a fully automated engineering robot with intelligent learning and a brain which can detect itself or prevent problems and fix itself as it undergoes it's work day?
Thanks for reading.

Update:
Just two months after I wrote this article, the monied, rich, hustling, 3d printing industry jump onboard with sensational articles and mockups to boost funding, investment and share values.
read here
and here
and here
I mean, who can't afford a 6-axis Kuka Robot Arm these days and under use it as a filament 3d printer, then photoshop some ai bounding boxes, and say you're connected to Milan and Zaha Hadid? Just do Jazzhands and you're set.