by victoriavictrix » Sat Apr 23, 2011 10:11 pm
Sorry to disappoint.
Here's the deal. These things have a limited (usually 7 by 7 inch) field they can "print" in. There are several kinds of these printers. One even uses sugar to "print" with, but the RapRep (that stands for Rapid Reproduction) printers you are talking about use plastic. It basically lays down a 3-D object with melted plastic, a bit at a time (some, "tank" printers, use lasers in a tank of solution to solidify the object.) The "cheapness" of your objects depends entirely on how good you are with the software so you can squeeze as many of the parts you want into the 7 by 7 inch cube. So people can make, oh, say a LOT of BJD size weapons and sell them much cheaper than anyone has ever been able to before. But for a doll you will have to get very, very good with the software, AND very good at "ganging" your parts. You will have to know exactly how you want your doll to fit together and the tolerances for the parts fitting together. Your margin for error is pretty much zero. Mess up and you have to re-draw the part and re-print it.
Oh and I did not mention that the surface of the parts you produce is VERY rough. No seams but imagine a doll being printed pixel by pixel, thousands of little dots being fused together. The cheaper the printer, the more rough the surface. $1000 for a printer is very cheap indeed. And I don't know what the strength of the plastic it uses is.
You can do what Kiki-chan is doing, and get time on a bigger, more expensive printer (the one she uses is in Holland I think). You get a nice object, and it can be of very tough plastic indeed, but the cost is going to be very, very high indeed for a doll, you will be paying for shipping back from Holland, and because of the time to ship you won't find out if your doll parts actually fit together for some time. And you absolutely will need higher-end software to model your parts. Kiki-chan has the advantage of being at MCAD and so can use the school's software and computers.
Mind you, all this has come down SIGNIFICANTLY in price from what it was even a year or so ago ($100,000 for a baseline printer, and no such thing as a desktop or hobbyist version).
When you see all of this stuff being talked about in Makers' forums, you have to remember that Makers can run the gamut from people like us, putting things together from scavenged bits, to people who are making competition combat robots for Robot Wars, huge Tesla coils and enormous art pieces for Burning Man. So when the folks at the cutting edge of this say "cheap" they mean "Under $10,000 and we are putting most of the hardware and software together ourselves." They don't mean "this is something the average person who does a few 1/6 figure mods can handle easily and costs $100."
I have the feeling you thought this was something you could just download from the internet and then somehow put together from a couple things you had in the kitchen or garage. Sorry.
Edit again: While we are at it....ever done maintenance on an airbrush or a high-end color printer? Now quadruple that for the maintenance on something that uses melting plastic instead of paint, and which needs to have absolutely zero-tolerance accurate calibration.
All you damn kids get offa my lawn!