I have four separate components designed that I want to send to be 3D printed.
However, I have not done this in the past and so I am unsure of the correct steps to take.
Can anyone give me some instruction, or perhaps point me to a video that will explain the process.
Thank you in advance,
Cedric
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by lichtzeichenanlage. Go to Solution.
Depends on the design,
for each body to print, right mouse click the body in the browser, in the menu, select Save to Stl, Fusion may take a while, will present a blue and black preview, check the options on this dialogue,
ok, or next, will bring up the file save box for you to nominate the save location,
Rinse and repeat, the other three bodies.
Again depending on the design, you can right mouse click the top browser entry, and the whole design will be saved as stl, from this location.
Might help...
In addition to @davebYYPCU post it might not worth mentioning that if your design contains more than one body, you might want to right-click the top level element in the browser window, choose Save as STL and select On File Per Body. Otherwise all your bodies are saved in on STL file and you can't arrange them in your slicer anymore.
You might want to take my free Intermediate 3D Printing class on Instructables. It covers tolerances, orientation, and support structures, which are important best practices when designing for 3D printing in Fusion.
https://www.instructables.com/class/Intermediate-3D-Printing-Class/
lichtzeichenanlage,
Thank you for your reply to my question about preparing a component for 3D Printing.
I apologize for not getting back to you sooner, but some family issues have taken all of my time lately.
However, your comment regarding keeping only one component of an assembly to each file was very useful.
I really appreciate your suggestion and I also appreciate your involvement in the community. It takes people like you, to get people like me out of trouble from time to time.
Again, thanks!
Cedric
Jonathan,
I have now started in on your Intermediate 3D Printing class on Instructables. Your class is very informative and because of it, I have now invested in my own 3D Printer.
Thank you for replying to my question! If you had not, I may not have taken the plunge into the world of 3D Printing.
Again, thank you!
Cedric
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