This is by far the largest (electronical) thing I ever built.
However, the kit I ordered contained everything necessary and the downloadable assembly guide is awesome.
I used some tape to have most components stay in place while soldering and also used an adjustable 360° PCB holder which made assembling the board a piece of cake.
I am currently in the process of printing a case provided by djones60 on thingiverse - I believe it's linked somewhere in this forum as well.
And I also started to experiment with its capabilities. First thing I had to try was getting the most famous one liner to work with the Gigatron: 10PRINT.
Here's some images of my build:
And if you'd like to try out my ported one-liner:
10 put 95+29*rnd(2):goto 10
A video can be watched here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OQEikvOiMX0
German Gigatron TTL is alive
Forum rules
Use this forum to show off your build photos. For build issues, please consult the directions in the sticky post on top instead.
Use this forum to show off your build photos. For build issues, please consult the directions in the sticky post on top instead.
Re: German Gigatron TTL is alive
Your Gigatron looks great, well done!
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- Posts: 5
- Joined: 22 Jun 2023, 10:48
Re: German Gigatron TTL is alive
Thank you! <3
The enclosure is also finished now. However,... I am thinking about a redesign. I only have an Anycubic i3 Mega with a bed size of like 210x210, so I had to split the parts.
A couple of months ago, I 3D printed a mechanically fully working grand piano. Many parts were also too big for my print bed. Its designer however did a great job in offering variations that have specifically been adapted to smaller print beds in a way that looks like as if it was always meant to be printed that way. The results are awesome!
Maybe I can achieve something similar.
We'll see...
Re: German Gigatron TTL is alive
Mephisztoe wrote: ↑23 Jun 2023, 18:20Thank you! <3
The enclosure is also finished now. However,... I am thinking about a redesign. I only have an Anycubic i3 Mega with a bed size of like 210x210, so I had to split the parts.
A couple of months ago, I 3D printed a mechanically fully working grand piano. Many parts were also too big for my print bed. Its designer however did a great job in offering variations that have specifically been adapted to smaller print beds in a way that looks like as if it was always meant to be printed that way. The results are awesome!
Maybe I can achieve something similar.
We'll see...
signal-2023-06-23-185537_003.jpeg
signal-2023-06-23-185537_002.jpeg
I'm interested in 3D printing a piano because I want to make a harpsichord.
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- Posts: 5
- Joined: 22 Jun 2023, 10:48
Re: German Gigatron TTL is alive
I bought a ready-to-print model of a grand piano designed by Mechanistic.
I has been the most complex thing I ever printed, since it consists of about 350 printed parts, approx. 400 screws and a couple of other components. So we are talking about almost 1.000 Parts. It took like three months print and assemble everything.
I wrote about it (in german, but you can easily translate the blog articles using common browser addons).
This is the first article:
https://www.tthinkttwice.de/2023/01/27/ ... el-teil-1/
And if you like you can see the assembled result here:
https://www.tiktok.com/@mephisztoe/vide ... 6551591174
I has been the most complex thing I ever printed, since it consists of about 350 printed parts, approx. 400 screws and a couple of other components. So we are talking about almost 1.000 Parts. It took like three months print and assemble everything.
I wrote about it (in german, but you can easily translate the blog articles using common browser addons).
This is the first article:
https://www.tthinkttwice.de/2023/01/27/ ... el-teil-1/
And if you like you can see the assembled result here:
https://www.tiktok.com/@mephisztoe/vide ... 6551591174