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mickeyptoday at 12:35 PM4 repliesview on HN

You know you're doing a great job, OP, when the peanut gallery here has nothing more substantial to add than to critique your em-dashes; greek-latin root word mix-ups despite the common vernacular having moved on from that; and lack of title brevity.

Congratulations --- this is a super cool project. I wonder if you've considered using ultralight filaments and 3dprinting the frame? PLA is stiff but brittle, and I know Bambu and a few others sell specialised versions that supposedly weigh less than normal.


Replies

bri3dtoday at 1:36 PM

Most filament based printed frames end up with really nasty resonance; it’s possible to engineer damping around the issue with some clever 3D design if the parameters of the prints are measured, but overall 3D printing copter frames doesn’t tend to be a straightforward solution.

felooboolooombatoday at 3:25 PM

I wish we had some standard filament testing that most manufacturers were willing to provide results for.

Until that happens, this guy here is probably the next best thing: https://www.youtube.com/@MyTechFun

Plot twist: many of the "special" filaments aren't special at all or at least very exaggerated.

cwmooretoday at 12:51 PM

Yes. And when your design is simply beautiful as this is:

https://karolina.mgdubiel.com/drone/drone-img/05-30-26/cnc_c...

the__alchemisttoday at 1:39 PM

I agree with your first point.

The milled fiberglass the author used is a much better UAS frame material than anything from a filament 3d printer due to stiffness and related considerations.

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