Sensor Enclosure

A simple sensor enclosure for the 10 year old to do a project with an arduino and an IR sensor. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dwyer Devices (@dwyerdevices) The base, body, and side isolate a sensor with three wires leading to an external breadboard, while the top secures test material in place….

Park Bench

A doll-house scale park bench roughly based on a common style of bench in New York City’s Central Park. There are two leg widths, and two bench widths in this set. The bench slat widths are 100mm and 170mm, allowing for a wide or compact bench. The legs are provided in 4mm width and 7mm width. View…

Modding the Broken Airship

It would be a terrible waste to throw away the parts of the failed airship, as it we’d be tossing 50+ hours of printing, so we’ll add some parts and continue to use it, possibly as a previously decommissioned airship renovated and modded by some faction or gruop in the City in the Sky. The rear hard-points…

More Clips, or How to Finish off a Spool

What to do with the last meter or two of filament on a spool? I print more filament clips, as I’m constantly losing these things. This batch was printed to fit Inland/eSun spools, and just about perfectly finished off a spool of light brown PLA. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dwyer Devices (@dwyerdevices)…

Mini Great Buddha at Kamakura

I loved printing the Great Buddha at Kamakura, and we found ourselves in need of a quick, but meaningful, birthday present. A scaled down version of Buddha to the rescue: View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dwyer Devices (@dwyerdevices)

The Great Buddha at Kamakura

I had just acquired some Red Copper Tianse PLA, had recently begun seriously perusing the Scan the World collection on MyMiniFactory, and the house felt like it needed a decent Buddha statue – lucky for me I found a scan of the Great Buddha at Kamakura, Japan. This Buddha is shaped such that minimal supports were required during…

Charging Bull

We spent a few years working on Wall Street when we lived in New York City, and would occasionally walk through Bowling Green and see Charging Bull. I find this statue interesting for a few reasons: the financial mindset that drove early Wall Street, and the corruption (or logical conclusion) of that mindset into a one of profit-at-all-costs,…