[-] [email protected] 2 points 16 hours ago

Thanks! I am going to keep those all in my back pocket for when the honeymoon of not having a $99 "box o' parts" Voxelab wears off, though I feel a little guilty for never installing that BLTouch clone now.

I haven't printed much with the Sovol yet. So far, the main things I'm running into are bed adhesion (the old standby of a washable glue stick is helping), and I've had a couple of vertically oriented parts get knocked off the bed, and slowing down quite a bit helped.

[-] [email protected] 11 points 16 hours ago

For the record, mixing two painkillers without consulting a doctor is also usually a bad idea but way fucking less of a bad idea than taking 13000mg of tylenol in a day.

Basically, if something hurts so much that you might take enough paracetamol/acetaminophen to fuck with your liver then you yes, you should be under a doctor's care. That said, between my wife and me, we've had three or four doctors over the years all be very chill with the idea of alternating Tylenol and Ibuprofen after surgery or the like. I guess they work on such different chemical pathways that they don't have much interaction potential, and keeping under the daily dose of Tylenol in particular is incredibly important, as we've seen in this thread.

8
submitted 1 day ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

This is gonna be a cluster...

[-] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

I know the beds are worse, apparently almost all of them. Sovol chose to change the Voron reference design to be cheaper and it’s just not held down right, so they exhibit varying degrees of “taco” inconsistency that the diagram accentuates visually. Mine has a corner that seems to be about 0.4mm too high, and the rest is a bit wavy to lesser amounts. This is the main reason I set it to redo its z offsets before every print.

The Sovol doesn’t use standard extrusion profiles so it’s less moddable, its hot end is not completely standard, and it uses injection molded parts in places the Voron uses 3d printed parts (that last may be be an advantage, lol). The Sovol also doesn’t run a completely clean version of Klipper. I think it’s set in a way to make it work a little better with their cheaper BOM.

It’s big and fast and Voron-like, but it’s just not a hand crafted super printer like a Voron can be.

[-] [email protected] 5 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

I just got a Sovol SV08, which is like a Voron but changed up a bit so the teacher doesn't get mad... and to be cheaper :-)

I'm just coming in from an Ender3 clone, but overall, other than the potential of taco bed messing up some prints, I've been really pleased with it. I'm still fine tuning what it likes to do, including slowing it down on some small vertical prints, letting the bed "heat soak" for a while to even out, and running the Z Offset calibration on every print, but Core XY, auto leveling, and all the other little QoL advantages are nice, and I've already used the big bed to print stuff that wouldn't fit on a "normal" bed.

For your specific printer, Vorons are generally even more kit built than most printers, sometimes even completely assembled from a BOM by the builder/user. If they did it well, and if it loks to be in good shape, it should be an excellent and well supported printer. I paid USD490 for "We have Voron at home" and I feel like it was a good deal. I'm not super well versed in pricing in Europe, but EUR770 seems like a good deal on a kit, a REALLY good deal on a new 350mm, and a very solid one for a used printer in good shape.

Now, all that said, I am super glad that I kinda had some experience with more primitive printers before I got the Sovol. I'm less panicky about little inconveniences and realities of printing (especially on a budget), and I feel like I at some high level understand how it's all supposed to be working and that I can look up how to fix things and implement what I learn. If you don't want to deal with any of that, a Bambu, even with its potential walled garden "sword of Damocles", might be a simpler idea.I understand they really are just super easy to live with.

[-] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

On the plus side, they can just use her real name for the character's name. I hear it makes acting way easier.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago

Corb Lund is great, and that album is one of his best.

[-] [email protected] 3 points 3 days ago

Don Perlin on pencils. I originally thought John Romita Sr, but yeah, that jawline is a bit too dashing.

[-] [email protected] 19 points 4 days ago

maybe a bead from a dessicant packet? They're usually more clear, but can sometimes drift towards brown.

85
submitted 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

We would also accept "Ed Zeppelin."

[-] [email protected] 9 points 4 days ago

"Reasonableness" as the heading implies that they've been working on whether a word problem makes any sense at all. It's, perhaps ironically, an attempt to help them build critical thinking skills. Then, elementary school teachers are not all brilliant minds themselves, and even the ones who are incredibly gifted educators are overworked, and their schools are generally underfunded. You get a cheap resource, maybe even a free one, or one your former mentor threw together late one night three years ago, and you can end up with a sloppy question. If you yourself are having a bad moment, or are not particularly talented, or the kid is a known shitass, then yeah, you could overreact and respond like this.

Having just sat with my kid through a year of 5th grade math homework, it is completely plausible that this is a real quiz and a real response. Some of the question writing even in the professionally made materials is just not good, partly because it presumes a laser focus on a single "instructional variable," despite mandates to teach holistically.

[-] [email protected] 35 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

I also like the bonkers phase between the "just take a gun with you" era and the synchronizing gears. Seems to have boiled down to three or four ideas:

  1. Pusher prop and/or an extra 150 pounds of human to work a turret.
  2. Hope you don't completely destroy your propeller before you defeat or fend off your opponent.
  3. Slap some armor on it, then proceed with plan #2 with somewhat more hope, though now with the possibility of richochets.
  4. Mount a bizarre triangle thing to the back of it that will deflect the bullets in a somewhat less suicidal manner than simple metal plates.
71
submitted 5 days ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
[-] [email protected] 18 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

Maybe our friend here is really into snakes and wanted it done as though the arm is a snake with a human hand on the end? Still not a way I would have gone, in part because now, yeah, your arm is a meme, and also that's a lot of mental hoops for people to jump through, assuming you meant it at all, but it seems like decent enough work, so I choose to believe there is intentionality here.

496
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

… especially if the neighborhood is filled with little shits with too many electrified toys.

EDIT: Okay, I'm convinced. Regular bikes would actually be a sensible cause here. Let me be a curmudgeon though.

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submitted 1 week ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
3
When Taken 2025-04-29 (whentaken.com)
submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
#WhenTaken #427 (29.04.2025)

I scored 775/1000🏅

1️⃣📍1.0K km - 🗓️6 yrs - 🥈163/200
2️⃣📍406 km - 🗓️5 yrs - 🥇182/200
3️⃣📍620 km - 🗓️16 yrs - 🥈148/200
4️⃣📍1.8K km - 🗓️7 yrs - 🥈145/200
5️⃣📍3.1K km - 🗓️2 yrs - 🥈137/200

https://whentaken.com/
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submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
51
Back to my roots... (lemmy.world)
submitted 2 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Throwing heavy clickies and no-name caps onto a budget 1800...

  • RK96 that's been de-foamed, de-batteried, and remapped to the extent its garbage software will permit
  • Kailh Speed Navy
  • Mix-n-match QX SA caps from two different sets

It's a loud, cheap MF'er, and I kinda like it.

108
submitted 2 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
35
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

EDIT: Decided to get 16GB more RAM, a Ryzen 5 ~~2600~~ 3600 (used), and a Gen 3 Sabrent Rocket 1TB SSD. About $145 all-in so far. ~~If there are still issues, then a~~ GPU in the ~$150 used range is really the last upgrade for me on this platform, I think. Actively looking for a 6600 class due to the low power requirements. Thanks all!

So, I am currently running an absolutely ancient Ship of Theseus desktop. I have fairly modest needs, looking to play games, lets say on the order of Starfield, at 1080P, medium-ish settings, and not dropping below 30FPS when things get busy on-screen. Something like Minecraft I'd like to run a touch more aggressively, but I know it has its own technical bottlenecks that make it more intensive than you might think (don't murder me... I still play Bedrock because I like vanilla survival and it runs well). I also do some light 3D CAD using paid-for software that I like, so some sort of legal-ish Windows partition or VM with some form of GPU acceleration would also be nice, but I'm okay with running Linux for most things.

Current specs:

  • Gigabyte B450M mobo
  • Ryzen 5 2400G as CPU only
  • Radeon RX 580
  • 16GB PC3200 DDR4
  • Unholy accumulation of SATA III drives: a Lexar 250gb for Windows 10, a 120GB Samsung for a couple of games, and a 640GB 7200RPM drive for Linux and storage.

I have actually been able to get the aforementioned Starfield running at 50fps (inside and light load) and 20-25ish FPS (outside action) at a customized set of low settings that isn't too horrifyingly ugly, but (1) that's clearly about as good as it's going to get, and (2) it's probably contributing to my not playing it all that much. So, what would help, and is anything salvageable? Would prefer to keep the upgrades as cheap as possible while getting a noticeable improvement to tide me over for a couple more years of low-end gaming and CAD. I'm not targeting any specific number, just "better." If it helps, let's set a USD $300 cap on upgrades, but cheaper is better. I'm hoping that staying at the lower resolution will be helpful.

8
Title N/A (part IV) (lemmy.world)
submitted 3 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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wjrii

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