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'3d-printing a screw' is a way to describe how AI integration is stupid most of the time
(lemmy.dbzer0.com)
A "Showerthought" is a simple term used to describe the thoughts that pop into your head while you're doing everyday things like taking a shower, driving, or just daydreaming. The most popular seem to be lighthearted clever little truths, hidden in daily life.
Here are some examples to inspire your own showerthoughts:
If you made it this far, showerthoughts is accepting new mods. This community is generally tame so its not a lot of work, but having a few more mods would help reports get addressed a little sooner.
Whats it like to be a mod? Reports just show up as messages in your Lemmy inbox, and if a different mod has already addressed the report, the message goes away and you never worry about it.
I think you've completely missed the point.
We produce screws at industrial quantities, out of various materials, lengths, heads, pitches, etc etc etc.
The industrial scaling of this production results in screws being really really inexpensive. So inexpensive that depending on quantity you're looking at, the finished screws are no more expensive to you than the raw materials.
Yeah you can print a screw. The question is why?. It will be more expensive per unit, more labour intensive, of worse quality, and will do wear and tear to equipment you own. It's a lose/lose/lose/lose.
The one exception is that it is some mystical bespoke screw. And even then, it is likely that there are traditional methods which would better achieve that end (buy some screws that you can develop a process to modify in order to meet your needs)
It's a good analogy. Yes you CAN 3D print a screw. It doesn't mean it's appropriate or even economical to include them in your products. Yes you CAN vibe code something. It doesn't mean it's appropriate or even economical to include them in your products.
I mean, random bespoke dimensions show up all the time in 3D printing, including adding screwing features.
It doesn't remove the point about standard screws being far better made the classic way, but screwing shows up plenty often anyways!
One thing it's good for is that if you have the screw/nut on the bed with the part, you can scale both equally and the screw/nut will work with the part still, even if the threading is no longer a standard pitch/size. For a one-off or prototype that's fine, but if you're going to mass produce, it's better to fix it in CAD to a standard size and use manufactured fasteners.
Yep. If it's meant for mass production, that's solid advice for ALL components, not just screws. Anything that's not a standard part will need to be adapted to other production techniques anyways, as 3D printing is extremely inefficient for mass production.
Aren't eggs produced at industrial scales from chickens, who super-abundantly exist?
How is that working out?
In no universe does the economics of a $1 egg make sense, yet here certain countries are. Did you know you can have chickens in your backyard, and they'll turn bugs and cheap feed into eggs?
The less you can offload production to central untrusted parties, the better. When you manufacture something yourself, you get to know all the properties instead of trusting that some people elsewhere (whose primary motivation is money) still considered your interests by making a quality product.
So when you say "we," what does "we" mean exactly? It is rhetorical.
Additionally, you get consistent reproducibility without reliance on large scale logistical networks. There are many other reasons I can think of off the top of my head beyond this.
If we lived in a more cooperative world, with ironclad democratically owned logistics networks and manufacturing, centralized manufacturing would make sense in the way you say. But the reality is, we do not live in that world, and more and more, we are all increasingly feeling what that means.
I'd just like to comment that keeping your own chickens is not economical unless you are basically willing to convert your yard into a chicken farm and slaughter your chickens once they stop laying eggs after a couple years, and even then its gonna take you a while to recoup (ha) the cost off the chicken coop, feed, etc, not to mention the time it takes to take care of them. What you're really paying for with the cost of $1 (or really, 50 cents or less for most people) an egg is the convenience of eggs in the quantity you want them, with guaranteed quality, whenever you want them. Same with buying screws from the hardware store.
Edit: I'd originally written a response that matched your tone, and realized after a smoke that it's needlessly confrontational and snarky, so I'm going to take another shot.
I don't mean to imply that it's imperative that you don't make your own screws.
If you wanna make your own screws, go ahead, but I still don't think you should 3D print them. There are existing tools to do that which are cheap, simple, and will produce vastly superior screws. Also cheaper. A tap and die set is your answer there.
Also, if you want to leverage your 3D printer, use it for what it is actually good at which is creating complex bespoke geometries. Design your components with interlocking geometries such that you don't NEED screws.
Screws exist as the convenient solution to a manufacturing problem, being that it's often easier to create complex geometries by producing a set of simpler geometries and then fastening them together. The underlying problem goes away if you can print arbitrarily complex components.
If you think you gotta 3D print screws, you're probably not even actually leveraging the new technology to its fullest extent anyways, you're still designing with an old paradigm despite having new options.
I will process wood vinegar and corn starch into PET plastic to 3D print expendable stuff eith, thanks
Ah shit I edited my post to dial back the snark, but this comment is on point