Product Description
Does your kitty cause havoc by pawing at the inner liner of the Litter-Robot 3 causing it to pop off the hard plastic lip? If that little stinker does then this is what you need, this set of four clips will secure the liner more securely to the edge of the LR3 so it can’t pop off, no matter how much desperate pawing at solid rubber Mr(s). Smarty Pants does!
- Included in each set are four (4) clips.
- Compatible with our Full Shield, Alt Shield and Half Shield!
- Compatible with Litter-Robot’s Fence.
- If you have or are going to be purchasing any of our Guards you get this benefit built right in and don’t need anything extra!
DESIGN NOTE: This product was designed by Leigh Gardner Sowers who is a fellow Litter Robot Support Group member and a portion of the sale of this item will go to her!
How does 3D printing work?
Every 3D printer builds parts based on the same main principle: a digital model is turned into a physical three-dimensional object by adding material a layer at a time. This where the alternative term Additive Manufacturing comes from.
3D printing is a fundamentally different way of producing parts compared to traditional subtractive (CNC machining) or formative (Injection molding) manufacturing technologies.
In 3D printing, no special tools are required (for example, a cutting tool with certain geometry or a mold). Instead the part is manufactured directly onto the built platform layer-by-layer, which leads to a unique set of benefits and limitations
From here, the way a 3D printer works varies by process. For example, desktop FDM printers melt plastic filaments and lay it down onto the print platform through a nozzle (like a high-precision, computer-controlled glue gun). Large industrial SLS machines use a laser to melt (or sinter) thin layers of metal or plastic powders.
The available materials also vary by process. Plastics are by far the most common, but metals can also be 3D printed. The produced parts can also have a wide range of specific physical properties, ranging from optically clear to rubber-like objects.
Depending on the size of the part and the type of printer, a print usually takes about 4 to 18 hours to complete. 3D printed parts are rarely ready-to-use out of the machine though. They often require some post-processing to achieve the desired level of surface finish. These steps take additional time and (usually manual) effort.
This was copied from 3DHubs, for more information please visit them!
Thanks!