I like tennis. I like to use a vibration dampener on my racquet. I like 3D printing. I like typography. What does that spell? Experiments in making my own letter-shaped vibration dampeners.
The plan is to print it out as-is and then cut slots into the sides for the strings.
I have tested the dampener for at least four hours per week for the last eight weeks. Other than the type of slight shifting around that one would expect from a commercial dampener, it has stayed put. Time to open a custom dampener printing service or something.
I just tested her out for about half an hour. It didn't budge, and it absorbed vibrations at least as well as the Vibrex dampener I had on there before. It also didn't seem to split any more, which is good because the slots are cut along the grain of the layers.
Now we're scheming to slap a piezo on the thing and wire it to a microcontroller attached to my wrist.
My initial idea was to make a dampener in the shape of a k. I figured that if the letter were fat enough, one string could rest in the stem and the other in the arm and the leg of the k.
So, Cooper Black is pretty fat. That's the Tootsie Roll font. It's been around since 1921 and gets used in some funny places. It's very easy to instantiate letters in OpenSCAD:
If you don't linear_extrude() it, it's not a 3D object and it won't F6 or STL.
So . . . I printed it and it came out great. But I miscalculated and it's not wide enough to be a vibration dampener. Now I have a squishy k to play with.
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