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Sorry if this doesnt belong here, but i wanted to share. and this seemed like the right section.
I think if they don't eat the plastic plants in the habitat (I know they shred them), that they probably wouldn't eat pieces of the shell.GotButterflies wrote:Okay, first of all, 3D printing is extremely fascinating to me!!! Very cool that you do that!! What do you do your 3D printing with? I would be a little concerned about the hermits eating it because they do modify their shells.
as far as pricing it is very odd, If i send my files into a pro printer one shell made around 1.5 inch size would cost me 10+$ to make. Printing them myself does cut that price down a bit, but it takes me a good 5/6+ prints to even get the shell to print successfully, meaning a lot of material waist.KayedeeLove<3 wrote:You might be on to something here man! This could replace all the toxic shells in pet stores and I'm sure they'd be cheaper than buying real shells anyways (in the way of manufacturing vs. Harvesting)
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I search for mine at local beach shops, and shop at RichardsShells. Those are the size I use also.KayedeeLove<3 wrote:Sure would be nice id buy them its hard to find shells with 1"- 2" openings!
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Only way to reuse 3dprinter material is to get an filiment extruder which costs darn near the same as the printer, which i cant buy atm.HeyItsEggs wrote:That is SOOOO cool! Maybe the material that is wasted can be reused? I know what a 3D printer is but i have never used one.