I’m churning out Beco Blocks. I’ve got 5 sitting in front of me with another 6 printing up right now.
This makes me happy.
I’m churning out Beco Blocks. I’ve got 5 sitting in front of me with another 6 printing up right now.
This makes me happy.
I really like the connection mechanism behind the Beco Blocks. 1 It appears to allow a wide range of movement and rotation in the joint. There’s a lot of applications that come to mind:
In furtherance of these possibilities, I’ve taken the smallest male/female Beco Block and sliced it between the male/female connector parts. My idea is to start grafting these connector parts into other designs. I need to fix up the files a little – but when I get them usable I’ll post them up to Thingiverse.
I printed up my first Beco Block today – and I can’t wait to print up more. Nate True was kind enough to download the STL files, center, align, save, and zip all of the various pieces. 1
I’d like to see a new STL file out there that has several different types of these Beco Blocks all on one sheet (similar to Spacexula‘s Mendel production STL files). I could really see myself cranking out these by the dozens. In fact… once I had a sheet designed with a good mix of the various parts I could put it through the MakeNBreak script to churn them out.
A few weeks ago I posted my criteria for an interlocking building block system:
Well, just yesterday r3becca of Robots and Dinosaurs posted designs for “Beco Blocks” on Thingiverse. From the looks of things these Beco Blocks fit every criteria! I can’t wait to print up a bunch!
ManDrake responded to my last post about MakerBot being a victim of their own success:
Do you think the expectations difference could be at all connected to Bre’s constant overselling of the product to anyone that will listen? He’s completely disconnected from reality in the way he talks about the Makerbot and what it can do. He’s got the look and feel of the sham dot com boom types, overselling in hopes of getting some bigger company to buy them up, so they could unload their utter mismanaged and badly organized start up. In probably under an year they’ll sell out and then a corporate entity will realize their mistake and kill the product like they did as the boom died.
Here’s my response:
This may sound unrelated, but bear with me. Tonight I had the good fortune to hear Dr. Zahi Hawass speak in San Francisco. If you’ve ever seen an exhibit, TV show or documentary about Egypt, the pyramids, mummies, or King Tut you’ve seen him and heard his enthusiasm. He gave a piece of advice at the end of his talk:
“If you like something, it is not enough. If you love something, it is not enough. Only if you are passionate about it will you make it big.”
When I see Bre and Zach and Adam talk I see people who are truly passionate about their goals. This is the kind of passion scammers imitate and others wish they had. Their passion is infused in their products and absolutely infectious.
Devlin posted a comment in response to my last post which really deserves it’s own space:
Thank you! I share your sentiments. However, one would argue that we already have our MakerBots and have some kind of bias. I got mine about a month after I ordered and I was pretty excited the whole time I was waiting but I knew it was worth the wait.
MakerBot is starting to get hurt by its own popularity. It seems the userbase is getting more mainstream and there will be people that will be expecting this $750 machine to print the same stuff as a $30,000 printer, will want it to print things right out of the box with one click of the mouse and not contribute to making the machine better.
People that buy a MakerBot must understand that it is still in its infancy. To compare it to a previous revolution: the MakerBot 3D printer is at the same stage as personal computers when they were only available as a kit, programs had to be keyed in on 16 key pad and were displayed on seven-segment displays. If people can not deal with the problems this might entail, then they should wait the PC’s ten years for their own IBM PC/Apple/Atari/Commodore to come out or for someone to build the parts needed to make a RepRap for them (something I need to work on myself).
MakerBots are not a product that you go out to BestBuy and get because you saw it in some magazine or blog. It is a product that you buy to build and modify to make stuff. It is closer to a fruiting potted plant than a printer you buy at BestBuy. It requires tending, understanding and maybe even love.
There’s a lot to think about here. Let’s take Devlin’s points in turn:
The poor guys over at MakerBot just can’t win for losing.
People just begged for pre-orders. Now people are upset they have to wait because of pre-orders! Without pre-orders everyone would be guaranteed a longer wait time.
If you pre-order a MakerBot it may feel like you’re waiting a long time for your kit – but waiting on a pre-order is so much better than waiting for a sold out product to be placed back in stock. In the meantime, there are so many ways to get ready, participate, and contribute.
Seriously, get started right now! There’s not a moment to lose!

I’ve designed a new part for printing on Bender1 . Here’s a picture of the part. I’m trying to see if I can print a working ball joint. Obviously, it needs to consist of breakaway multi-parts.
If this works I’d like to try using it as a component of a larger more complicated object. However, Skeinforge throws a fit every time I try to skein it. I’m uploading it here in case anyone can help me fix it.
When I read the RepRap blog or the RepRap builder’s blog I see people printing incredible things in PLA. And I never hear about their troubles with PLA. Nothing about it jamming or being fussy about temperatures. What am I missing? What are Darwins and Mendels doing that my little MakerBot isn’t?
The RepRap challenge has a number of obstacles for the interim award. There are two in particular that seem insurmountable.
I have to imagine something large enough to accomplish all of the other goals would cost well over $200.00. If an entire Darwin or Mendel were trasmorgrified King Midas1 style into pure plastic, I would think the plastic alone would eat up 90% of the budget. Even the best deals around the internet for RepRap parts just the electronics are roughly $215.
I say it seems insurmountable – but if someone had told me two years ago I could one day buy a full kit for building a robot that would make me any plastic thing I could imagine for $1,000.00 I would have laughed at them.