Skip to navigation

Part of the Week — Carl Calabria’s Caddytown (2 parts, a socket and power bit caddies)

Carl created caddytown in OnShape to house his ever-growing power-bit and socket collection. Both are printed in these pictures in nylon, without composite reinforcement. The nylon is actually great for this application because you can flex it slightly to pull out one of the bits. The nylon will bend slightly many, many times without cracking.

Bit Caddy in Eiger
Bit Caddy Reinforced

You could absolutely print this on a Mark One with a composite base, too. Eiger will add some fiber layers for you, or you could add some yourself. Adding a few fiber layers to the bottom could help the part print flat and add some stability, but this design works better using the compliance achieved with nylon – the bits fit snuggly and are easier to get out based on the way MarkForged’s nylon slightly flexes.

The socket caddy is also special for another reason. It’s specific to a Wera socket set that long ago parted ways with the socket holder. Carl was able to quickly model this holder perfectly suited to the size of these sockets.

Different socket sets may have different diameters than this tray. If you’d like to reuse it, the best bet is to scale the part to fit your sockets.

Carl submitted this part as a contestant in MarkForged’s internal “Part Of The Week Competition.” It was a close race, but Carl was first runner up. He lost to a shamelessly submitted customer part, that will be posted on the blog as well. You can also see this part on Thingiverse.

Specifications

Power-bit CaddySize 55mm x 46mm x 14mmEstimated Print Time ~3h 48minNylon Cost ~$2 STL Download

Wera Socket CaddySize 55mm x 46mm x 14mmEstimated Print Time ~3h 48minNylon Cost ~$1.75 STL Download via Thingiverse

所有博客和博客中包含的信息版权均归 Markforged 公司所有,未经我们的书面许可,不得以任何方式复制、修改或采用。我们的博客可能包含我们的服务标志或商标,以及我们附属公司的服务标志或商标。未经我们事先许可,您使用我们的博客并不构成您使用我们的服务标记或商标的任何权利或许可。Markforged 博客中提供的信息不应被视为专业建议。我们没有义务根据新信息、后续事件或其他情况更新或修订博客。

不错过任何一篇文章

订阅以在您的收件箱中获取新的 Markforged 内容