Open a new blender project. From the drop down menus along the top, Select open, import, import STL, then find your first stl in the file explorer. Repeat this to import the second stl. Drag and rotate both objects until they’re lined up how you want them. Select both stls at the same time. Right click and select “merge”. Then in the drop down menus, find export, export as STL. Save it as your new STL. Open this new stl in your preferred slicer program, and your good to go!
Comment on [Question] Can You Uncut A STL?
AlexanderTheGreat@lemmy.world 3 months agoHow would I go about doing this? Any tutorials you can point me to?
Boinkage@lemmy.world 3 months ago
skookumasfrig@sopuli.xyz 3 months ago
Open stl #1 in blender, then open #2. Save it as a new stl.
AlexanderTheGreat@lemmy.world 3 months ago
But then the pieces aren’t lined up. And if I line them up to the keys it still leaves slight space inside the keyhole which creates pockets and suction during printing
dual_sport_dork@lemmy.world 3 months ago
Your issue is certainly that the designer of your model left clearances between the parts to ensure that they would fit together. This is proper and correct, because otherwise you’d never be able to physically assemble the parts here in physical reality. Some amount of tolerance is required since no printer is 100% accurate, and a total interference fit would not work with most materials anyway. The problem is, when printing as a single unitary piece that’s not what you need anymore.
You’ll have to modify the models to close these gaps, or just insert your own solid object in between them to take up the gaps and then export the whole assemblage as a single object.
Most slicers can do this, although typically the objects they can create out of thin air are only geometric primitives (cubes, spheres, cylinders, etc.) so you might not be able to create the right sized object or otherwise you’ll have to use a whole dickton of them.
AlexanderTheGreat@lemmy.world 3 months ago
Oh I get why is it done that way, just a pain to put back together aha. I’ll give filling in the key holes a try. Seems like the easiest solution. Don’t know why I didn’t think of that aha.
Apepollo11@lemmy.world 3 months ago
To avoid the gaps you can line them up with an overlap.
You can adjust the vertices of the model slightly to help facilitate this. The most natural-feeling way to do it in Blender is by using the Sculpt mode.
You can use a Boolean addition operation to then make the two models a single piece of geometry. Or not bother (if you are printing on FDM or at 100% infill in resin, it won’t really hurt either way).
AlexanderTheGreat@lemmy.world 3 months ago
This feels like the way to go. Any tips on where to find a tutorial for doing this in blender? Or even just what I should google lol