Get Medieval With a 3D Printed Crossbow
3D print this crossbow to take your target practice to the next level.
3D print this crossbow to take your target practice to the next level.
Geoff Shorts assumed TinkerCad would be a pointless step-down from Fusion, but was pleasantly surprised by the results he got.
Take the suspense of a leaping clown and add face-detection that creepily turns a crank when it sees you approaching.
This past week, Inventables spotlighted its maker pro users, Indiegogo launched a marketplace, and new 3D printing frontiers were reached.
Download and print the custom design, then put your candy corn to good use. Just don’t aim at anyone’s heads, please.
There have been questions from the maker community about the viability of the Ono printer, so we set out to see it in action.
Matthew Borgatti describes himself as a Dielectrical Materialist. He enjoys working with his hands and making quick iterations on his ideas.