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3D printing with RepRap Cookbook

You're reading from   3D printing with RepRap Cookbook Over 80 fast-paced recipes to help you create and print 3D models

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782169888
Length 346 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Richard Salinas Richard Salinas
Author Profile Icon Richard Salinas
Richard Salinas
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with 3D Printing 2. Optimizing the Printing Process FREE CHAPTER 3. Scanning and Printing with a Higher Resolution 4. Modeling and Printing with Precision 5. Manipulating Meshes and Bridges 6. Making the Impossible 7. Texture – the Good and the Bad 8. Troubleshooting Issues in 3D Modeling 9. Troubleshooting Issues in 3D Printing A. Understanding and Editing Firmware B. Taking a Closer Look at G-code C. Filament Options for RepRap Printers Index

Using MeshLab for remeshing


MeshLab offers a variety of remesh schemes. Some of these schemes offer better control than their counterpart in TopMod. Because of these control options, it's the best program for remeshing 3D models made with SketchUp. In this next recipe, we're going to learn how to subdivide the surface of a SketchUp model into a uniform high-density mesh. This will be important for working through the next two recipes.

Getting ready

You'll need MeshLab. If you didn't download it in Chapter 3, Scanning and Printing with a Higher Resolution, then you'll need to from http://meshlab.sourceforge.net/. You'll also need the toy block model you made with SketchUp in Chapter 4, Modeling and Printing with Precision.

How to do it...

We will proceed as follows:

  1. Select the Import Mesh icon on the toolbar. Open the model of the toy block you made in SketchUp Make, as shown in the following screenshot. The default view is Flat. Choose the Flat Lines icon on the toolbar.

  2. Go to Filters and select...

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