Grab Toy ++
thingiverse
Had lots of problems printing the amazing Scissor Snake family with hinges fusing together and some parts snapping. So I tried to design a simpler hinge that could be printed in place using OpenSCAD, where I could play with different spacings between moving parts. Then I did the code for the rest of the toy, learning OpenSCAD along the way. Very cool software! Instead of printing the biggest grabtoy and being disappointed it fused together, you can first check which spacing works better for your printer settings by printing the HingeSlackTest model. The default slack of 0.5mm is a good starting point. The lowest I managed when printing PLA at 0.2mm resolution with my Anycubic I3+ at normal speed was 0.35, but only at very low temperatures (190º) which results in poorer surface finish. I found that robustness of the toys varied a lot depending on the slicing software, with some not putting extra material in thin regions that are structurally important (mostly the cores and shoulders of the hinges). Playing around I realized that some carefully placed thin slits forced slicers to create extra walls, thus reinforcing key areas. Enable or disable them by setting REINFORCE_CORE and REINFORCE_SHOULDER to true or false. HingeSlackTest generates a 4-hinge test model with slacks of 0.6, 0.5, 0.4 and 0.3mm. Print it to see how small can you set the spacing for hinges before they fuse together. Then set the slack parameter accordingly and render one of the grabtoy models below. GrabToyPlusPlus4hinges generates the simplest grab toy model, with just one expansion frame. GrabToyPlusPlus10hinges makes a bigger grab toy, with 3 expansion frames. Included STL files are GTpp_HingeSlackTest.stl: a render of the hinge test model. GrabToyPlusPlus_4hinges_slack05.stl: render of the short grabtoy, using 0.5mm slack for hinges. And GrabToyPlusPlus_10hinges_slack05.stl: long grabtoy render, 0.5mm slack. Enjoy!
With this file you will be able to print Grab Toy ++ with your 3D printer. Click on the button and save the file on your computer to work, edit or customize your design. You can also find more 3D designs for printers on Grab Toy ++.