Created by Media Library Corporation for the purpose of learning a higher understanding of life creation.
Monday, July 9, 2018
Update ; 3D printing a house without a computerized 3D printer
Update
Here's the proof
If you can't afford a 3D printer, we are about to show you how to 3D print without a 3D printer that means manually. Please read careful and use your imagination to fill in the blanks this form is not to let you still or ideas but give you a reference on how it's done.
Here's another mystery why do they say there's a race to build the first 3D printed house, of course it would depend on your definition of what a 3D printed house exactly is. Let's look at some older unsophisticated 3D printing without the computer that was done years ago. And then understand what are they trying to do in the future different then they already done in the past. Maybe it's just forgotten and they thought it's brand new keep in mind it could be just that they added a computer onto all these new inventions. To fully understand what we're talking about you must watch each and every video, to understand the purpose when we say we can build you a 3D printer without a 3D printer or what is called a manual 3D printer see the video Brickey. And yes you can make full bricks and slide down to the next one which you will see in the past and other videos that we put for you to understand one simple thing there's nothing new Under the Sun.
By modifying this toy and the cements that you work with you can now 3D print like a 3D printer. the secret came out of this press brick machine, as long as you can make your concrete like clay you can use whatever form to pressed your bricks into existence
After seeing this it is your turn to use your imagination to make your own brick making 3D manual printer. Of course will give you some back reference for you to figure it out it's not hard at all, it's just using your Ingenuity to get the job done. We've already told you the secret make your cement like clay.
What you are seeing is a 3D printer that prints with cement instead of plastic. But can you 3D print without the computer and get similar results, here's a device below that comes close.
After seeing the information we now look for information on people who have built their own out of basic woods and screws see the video below DIY has become a major industry.
So we are to understand that we could take a couple pieces of wood glued or hammered or even nailed together and make an apparatus they can do close to what a 3D machine can do, without all the fancy curves and designs in it just a straight wall. Most people have claimed it after cement has Drive you can't lay another layer on top of it, of course laying bricks would prove them wrong since the bricks are dry and the mortar put on top of it is wet even after years you could go back and extend the wall. So it's all about the materials used mortar or cement for a combination of the two, this is the information missing about making your own 3D printer without the actual 3D computerized printer. Yes you could manually 3D print your own basic shapes.
The information above in the video only shows you what the computer must do in order to do its job, these are called references videos to learn how a computer can do the work of a human, now let's go back to how we can now turn ourselves into 3D printers and get the job done on the cheap. Reference history
Here's a new device, so they say, because most of you don't believe there's nothing new Under the Sun. So let's take this history references on how these different devices came to the market This concrete ball was supposed to be the motel of the future,
In 1935, an inventor from Indiana devised a new way to build what he believed was the motel of the future. If William E. Urschel had had his way, tourists around the world would all be relaxing in these concrete golf-ball-looking structures by now. It's a good thing he didn't get his way.
Comparing his structures to the igloos of the Inuit people, Urschel's patent for his ball-motel building system described it as an "eskimo house building form." His structures were billed as offering a more efficient use of space, and Urschel claimed that they were also more convenient to build than old-fashioned houses with traditional building methods. And they weren't just for motels. Urschel imagined that these golf-ball designs could be used for gas stations, "tourist refreshment buildings," or even churches.
The October 1935 issue of Everyday Science and Mechanics magazine included an illustration of the building (above) and a few illustrations cribbed from the patent application.
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