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<blockquote data-quote="Sidewinder" data-source="post: 499753" data-attributes="member: 9512"><p>Seeing Noz questioning the oreintation of the part being made by Onoff, it strikes me having had a toy bought for the granddaughter by her uncle to be (my daughter no. 2’s fiance) which broke when she hit something with it (It was a Thor’s hammer replica), that these parts rely on orientation a lot for their strength?</p><p></p><p>Much like wood.</p><p></p><p>I think the error with the Thor’s hammer print was the whole thing was printed as one, with the handle vertical, thus each layer of the handle was a cross section waiting to break, where as if it had been printed with the hammer handle horizontal, it might have needed something to support the handle but it would have been much much stronger, or would that not be possible?</p><p></p><p>That is if you can picture what I mean, the hammer laying down with its handle on the ground would be stronger than the handle vertically up in the air</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Sidewinder, post: 499753, member: 9512"] Seeing Noz questioning the oreintation of the part being made by Onoff, it strikes me having had a toy bought for the granddaughter by her uncle to be (my daughter no. 2’s fiance) which broke when she hit something with it (It was a Thor’s hammer replica), that these parts rely on orientation a lot for their strength? Much like wood. I think the error with the Thor’s hammer print was the whole thing was printed as one, with the handle vertical, thus each layer of the handle was a cross section waiting to break, where as if it had been printed with the hammer handle horizontal, it might have needed something to support the handle but it would have been much much stronger, or would that not be possible? That is if you can picture what I mean, the hammer laying down with its handle on the ground would be stronger than the handle vertically up in the air [/QUOTE]
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