How can I get the clogged filament out of this heatblock and nozzle?
morbidcactus @ morbidcactus @lemmy.ca Posts 9Comments 603Joined 2 yr. ago
I really liked what they did with type matching too, and that shines literally are a different type, had an absolute blast with the game, plays really well on the deck (though it absolutely eats battery life), sticker system was really cool too, just in general they really did a stellar job of interesting systems and the story was interesting too.
Thinking about it now, I kinda almost want to call it a Pokémon/Golden Sun like? Golden sun had a really awesome system with Djinns where mixing different elements and changing if they were set would literally change that characters class, granted them totally different powers and stats, I'm operating on memory since it's been a long time but it's an amazing game, easily my favourite GBA title and I knew there was another game it was reminding me of.
I got the dbrand grip for it with stick grips, it's actually really nice to hold, certainly better than my switch lite (seriously that thing gives me RSI, really needed something to grip onto.) Which also has a kickstand attachment if you want. It's overall though very comfortable, I find it better to hold up over propping it up with something, seems to keep it at a more natural angle for me.
I also switched to clicky buttons on mine, it's definitely a preference but they feel better to me vs the stock ones on my partner's.
Petg inside the enclosed though can definitely have a short service life, the original x axis idler on my mk3s gave up the ghost after a month or so of pretty consistent printing of abs in the summer, had expected it so i the first thing I did in abs was a set of prusa spares which lasted until I did a bear mod last year.
There's obviously variation in filament though so YMMV, petg is still a solid material to use if you don't have an enclosure (though I'm always recommending then if only for gasses and fine particles while printing)
There's one like 1-2k down the road with just increasingly unhinged lawn signs and shit and ever-growing stuff scrawled all over his sprinter, just conspiracy stuff everywhere, save the children, american mixed with Canadian flag.
Honestly kinda concerned for the dude.
It's probably no coincidence that a large amount of technical people are some form of neurodiverse, I've run into a lot of others with ADHD working as a SWE, definitely suspected some as well when I worked as a Mech Eng (wasn't diagnosed then), and there's definitely people with autism as well.
Lots of our processes are flavours of continuous improvement, agile is amazing when it's done correctly, as I get older I've started pushing more for that.
Terminal usage is a tool just like GUI tools, I don't think it's helpful either to preload people with the belief that it's some arcane tool that takes years before you can start using it, like anything you pick it up by doing.
Can't really say it's 100% optional as a blanket case either, heavily depends on a user, my work I've depended on having a terminal for years, and that was even before I moved into SWE, I've seen lots of business developed processes put together as an amalgam of batch files, VBA/VBS, and python because they needed to put something together with what they had rights to.
Be honest that I don't see the terminal as a barrier to Linux anyhow, for the use case of "I browse the internet and use office programs", you absolutely do not need to drop to the CLI, at least not for Debian or Mint, can handle installs and updates through their graphical package managers. Most people probably aren't setting up services or the like on their machines, and if they are they already require terminal usage on any operating system.
I've found it varies from manufacturer to manufacturer as well as colour, some of the petg I've got has been chilling in my cabinet in the garage for at least 1 summer and it prints fine, just some stringing, other spools they're a mess right out the bag. Still worth drying filament, but more so stuff like nylon which is extremely hygroscopic.
Haven't looked into it but do shops offer lube analysis services? Yeah you could send out your own sample to a lab, having it as a shop service would be way more accessible to people.
Though, in my experience, getting people to commit can be a pain, lots of "yeah I know we have a long p-f interval and it's super noticeable before it functionally fails, but it's not that much effort so I'm doing needless maintenance anyhow just in case", which end of the day you do you.
I've used Thunderbird since forever as my go-to client, I used mutt as well for a while and that met my needs pretty well.
I've always known your world is complex, working closely with accountants and actuaries the last 4 years doing data applications further confirmed that, there's some legitimately complex math that shows up, and it's a lot of work to model that correctly.
"It's just a ..." Is a redflag to me, project's going to be a gongshow.
I find that mentality of not trying to understand the problem and its context totally counter to the engineering method.
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Personally, recommend forgejo, gitlab has a lot of features I didn't need and I found the upgrade process if you didn't keep on top of it annoying. Forgejo actions are pretty similar to github ones and setting up runners is super straightforward.
Mmmm, yeah that sucks, that first block I mentioned was an older style that wasn't fixed in place and I must have twisted it accidentally after a nozzle change, super slow leak just enveloped the thing, didn't help there either!
Let's say that a referendum passed, how would that even work? Found this Supreme Court remark from Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin in 2014 when I was searching around for an answer of "is that even possible?", apparently the Feds referred that question to the scoc during the Quebec referendums in the 90s, (see section 5) and the answer seems to be, certainly not unilaterally (I'll read this in detail when I have a chance). The also touch on treaty rights which is my question as well, Alberta is like all treaty land, how would the indigenous land rights be handled? On top of that, as far as I recall there's a tonne of crown land in Alberta, again, how would that be handled?
I don't have answers to these, just something I think about when these rumblings come up. I have my doubts about the actual popularity of an Alberta sovereignty movement, and frankly Canada is stronger with them than without, like with Québec it would be a loss to the federation.
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i was thinking along those lines for equipment monitoring stuff, klipper works with Prometheus & grafana (have metrics from my printers), was thinking about looking at using the extra accelerometers I have to do something like vibration monitoring.
I could see using a second sbc for extra sensors as well for support, thinking about printers that don't run klipper, so long as you can correlate data it should still be useful. Honestly kinda thinking something similar to PLC data, was fantastic for fault finding and failure investigations, also useful for process control + condition based maintenance, there's a heck of a lot that could be done with it.
Edit: You have me thinking about this now, what would be really cool is an ability to anonymously federate data tied to events, I recall some enterprise software I used like 5-6 years ago could do this with condition indicators, I have 2 machines, I won't see every failure mode, but if we had 1000 machines you can get much more accurate information about things like MTBF. Heck I'd even just be happy with some community FMEAs, really just thinking of taking a technical approach to my printer maintenance and usage.
What type of filament? Acetone doesn't do much to things like pla or petg, stuff that works aren't things you generally want around the house, industrial solvents and stuff. The jar of acetone can soften it up some but you'll need to soak for some time, I've used MEK too, but that's in the "don't keep that at home" category, it's really flammable and should use ppe (I mean should use ppe for a lot of the stuff we use, 99% IPA is harsh on your skin, I use nitriles because it irritates my hands something fierce.)
Cold pull as others recommended, nozzles are consumables, def should keep some around. Cleaning filament works pretty well in my experience if you have a partial clog.
I've been there though, first block I didn't use a sock and the set screws got encased in degraded petg, I ended up scrapping it and putting it on the shelf as a learning moment, def recommend a sock if you don't have, it's saved me a lot of grief.
Canadian polls have historically been fairly on it, 338 maintains a rating for each election. Helps as well that we do have a fundamentally different system being a Westminster style parliament, national aggregates are nice but your riding is the one you should pay the most attention to.
And always, yeah, vote, early if possible, it's super easy to vote in Canada. Linking how to vote specifically for unhoused people as it also has information for how to vote without id.
I kinda hate they don't put error bars on the chart, it's statistical noise that's likely all within the MoE.
Like in statistical process stuff, you can't say there's a trend from a singular data point, western electric rules for example, if you saw multiple consecutive data points and/or large swings maybe you could conclude a trend, but as it stands yeah nah no change.
Yeah, echoing this, I've run Linux off of my external nvme enclosure for is testing as well, mitigates the heat and durability issues but was nowhere near the best experience, though it's supposed to be able to do 10 Gbps so it's nice in pinch, it's my rescue and iso drive mainly.
Standard USB keys get toasty as heck just from regular usage, especially the metal bodied ones.
Personally I view SD card installs with a similar level of concern to a USB install, had those crap out with no warning in the past (though tbf, it's only happened a handful of times), I backup configs for my stuff running off of SBCs for that reason.
Softening and that, maybe? But it really depends on the filament brand too, as far as I'm aware, acetone doesn't readily dissolve in acetone which is what's meant by not doing much
Petg is pretty resistant, why PETs used for bottles.
Personal experience cleaning up clogged nozzles by immersing them, yeah acetone barely touched the petg