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Bearings #8
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For me the print is real tight so I had to really force the bearing in place so they sit there without anything additional. But if the fit is not perfect you could use some Loctite super glue, I use that in some places, for example to get the small bearings to stay. |
In case this might come handy: I printed the rocker bogie part using ASA-X and the body and arm with PLA. PLA prints (at least on my Creality Ender 3) came out perfect, whereas ASA-X shrunk a tiny bit while cooling down, even if my printer runs inside a temperature-controlled enclosure. In such a case the rocker bogie ball bearings were a bit loose. I solved that by simply designing and printing with PLA a very thin "adapter ring", basically a cilinder fitting the gap between the rocker bogie assembly and the ball bearing iself. I preferred not to use glue in order to be able to disassemble parts in case I need to in the future. I hope this helps. |
Ball bearing adjustment.f3d.gz In case this can help, here's the adjustment rings I designed. They can be printed in PLA, 15% infill, 3 walls. Ball bearing adjustment.f3d can be used to fill the gap between the body and the main rocker bogie bearing |
I just bought some of the large size bearings and was wondering how people are securing them into position (main_leg_body_connector to the leg_boddy_bearling_connector).
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