• @[email protected]
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    233 minutes ago

    There’s a third, where the first person puts on thingiverse and we do it for fun without owning the actual unit

  • @[email protected]
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    184 hours ago

    China mastered copying things well. A five pack of replacement knobs that actually match is $34 on Amazon. A crappy homemade knob for a $4000+ range is crazy.

    • @[email protected]
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      61 hour ago

      China has also mastered modern slave labor. That someone makes thier own replacement instead of ordering some small uncomplicated part from across the globe isn’t crazy, it’s self-reliant and smart.

      But that’s, like, just my opinion man.

    • @[email protected]
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      94 hours ago

      And Bosch makes and generally stands by their good products. Yeah they’re a company, but they’re not the worst!

      Also, where did original knob go, I need to know.

  • @[email protected]
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    6 hours ago

    So one is creative and solution seeking and now proud about himself and an inspiration to others and the other one – not, but just a thief.

    • @[email protected]
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      48 hours ago

      90cm.

      We have one for our 4 adult, 2 kid household. Its amazing how often it’s not big enough for all sorts of things.

      I think 2 X 60cm ovens make more sense in hindsight and they also dont take as long to heat up

    • @[email protected]
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      710 hours ago

      Or its the house people designated as the holiday house, maybe! Only actually used fully a few times a year.

      • Subverb
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        68 hours ago

        That’s my house. We have dual ovens and use them simultaneously several times a year, mostly holidays.

  • @[email protected]
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    6 hours ago

    My oven is so old I came across an identical one in an e-waste pile behind a store. I stole the timer knob and mechanism so I don’t need to keep using the broken one (manual only) anymore.

      • @[email protected]
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        166 hours ago

        *Reused, which is preferred to recycling even if the materials are 100% recyclable.

        That’s what I told to the store employee I encountered coming to work via the back door. He wasn’t too happy but ultimately let me do it.

  • @[email protected]
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    48 hours ago

    Thats going to be a squidgy mess after a long cooking session. Hope he doesn’t get plastic burns.

    • @[email protected]
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      66 hours ago

      I think something might be wrong with your oven uh… my knobs don’t get anywhere near the glass point of PLA when I’m cooking something.

      • @[email protected]
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        15 hours ago

        I don’t have a setup for ABS/ASA and been looking for affordable HT alternatives. Not sure how I haven’t heard about this.
        2.5x the price of PLA where i am, but not like I have better options on hand.

        • @[email protected]
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          34 hours ago

          2.5x the price of PLA where i am

          Yep, I usually print drafts in normal PLA and only the final part in the high temp stuff, but 2.5x is often still better than buying something if there’s even a solution available. So, fine for me in edge cases.

  • @Worx
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    4513 hours ago

    YOU WOULDN’T STEAL A BOSCH OVEN KNOB

  • @[email protected]
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    3614 hours ago

    I’d eyeball the measurements in Blender and laugh at my crooked knob every time I use the stove.

    • @[email protected]
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      1310 hours ago

      You’re still putting too much work into this. Just heat up the metal shaft where the knob was with a torch and press any old hunk of thermo plastic onto it. Now you have janky done even more quick and cheap.

  • @[email protected]
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    911 hours ago

    Channel locks, adjustable wrench, or plyers are also acceptable. Plus then ya know damned well where they are.

    • @[email protected]
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      711 hours ago

      This is why I always buy cheap vice grips whenever I see them in a box of tools at an estate sale or something.

      “Oops, I broke a handle on (thing).”

      Clamps vice grips on the bit left over

      “Fixed it.”

      Right now both of the seats in my truck just have a vice grips for the reclining lever.

  • @[email protected]
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    5416 hours ago

    I simply pulled the knob off in the store & shoved the rest of the stove up my butt, later at home I printed the missing knob. It’s a simple life-hack, basically everyone is doing it.

    • Possibly linux
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      616 hours ago

      I hate that as a society it is somehow ok to steal for your convenience. Its the same thing with lots of other things as well. Don’t you just love it when you buy a product only to get home and find half of it was stolen?

      • @[email protected]
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        16 hours ago

        A while back I would use those local secondhand auctions that mostly dealt in amazon returns. (As opposed to directly buying from amazon.)

        I’m surprised how everything would be intact for a lot of items, but most commonly if I got bamboozled, it was something like, everything is fine except for missing a set of screws, or a single crucial knob or something.

        People literally will just order the same thing again, pull the part they missed, and instantly return it. Which is especially scummy when it’s no longer a secret these returns just get destroyed or incinerated for no reason.

        It’s just disgusting consumer-brain behavior. (Amazon, of course, being sheer evil, enjoys the market advantage of a “no questions” return policy.)

        If it was a very specialty piece beyond a simple hardware store run, a lot of times I’ve been lucky enough to politely contact the manufacturer of a thing, sometimes I tell them I got it as a gift so they don’t ask for a proof of purchase. And they’ll just send me the missing bit. Free. Super simple. The most I had to do was take a picture of the model tag.

        The fact that this was too much for people to bother with grosses me out.

        • @[email protected]
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          25 hours ago

          I really appreciate that ikea instead has no questions asked small hardware replacement. Had a bed in my storage unit for years waiting for summers to kill the old landlord’s “pets”. Unfortunately in that time some important bolts rusted. Made me not need to throw the whole thing out

        • @[email protected]
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          6 hours ago

          If Amazon was a legit normal business this wouldn’t have worked and everything would have been processed. As you said, sheer evil made makes this.

        • @[email protected]
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          812 hours ago

          Not to say this behavior is okay, but there are some companies that also just exploit the alternative to high heaven, like the post shows. You can pay $20 for a 12 cent replacement part, or order one and return it. Some people will pay for the part, but significantly less will when it costs and arm and a leg for something so cheap.

    • @[email protected]
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      8 hours ago

      The type of person to do this most likely already has a 3d printer, and cad software is free for personal use. The electricity and filament cost for this part would be a few cents and it would take minutes to print on modern printers

      Even if you didn’t have a 3d printer it would be significantly cheaper to use a 3d printing service to order the part, than to buy OEM replacement knob

    • @[email protected]
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      5717 hours ago

      It’s true that you should not expect to save money in the short or long run with 3d printing as a hobby, but if it’s your thing then it’s nice to have a hobby that’s occasionally useful. Also, autodesk fusion is free for consumer use.

      • @[email protected]
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        2217 hours ago

        I wouldn’t say I’ve made back my investment on 3D printing in the past half a decade I’ve done it. But in terms of “prints for friends” like this one above I may be close. Plus there’s just something nice about going “I need a measuring cup for dog food” and printing one to the exact serving size.

          • @[email protected]
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            1017 hours ago

            I just use PLA. PLA itself is good safe, but occasionally the additives aren’t, so I don’t use any for human related stuff. It’s also worth considering that the layered approach can allow for bacterial growth, so unless you treat it (e.g. epoxy seal it), you’ll need to wash it fairly frequently to curb buildup.

            • @[email protected]
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              1617 hours ago

              That frequent washing is what leaks out the nasty chemicals from the plastic fyi. Heat and mechanical stress are the main way plastics leach

              • @[email protected]
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                24 hours ago

                To be fair, that’s the case with pretty much all plastics.
                Tupperware shouldn’t be used to reheat food in the microwave for the same reason, yet that’s it’s most common use generally.
                Untreated PLA is more brittle than commercial food-safe plastics though, that is true.

    • @[email protected]
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      19 hours ago

      If you do not have a 3D printer and CAD software, you are 100% right.

      If you already have those things like OP, then why not just design / print one? I am also a 3D printer / CAD person, and I love designing replacement parts that are wither too expensive, or often impossible to find. Mostly though, I design and print things that make my and my families lives easier / nicer / more convenient. And they are customized to the exact item and function, something that you would most likely never be able to get in a store or online.

      Stove Knob guards. https://www.printables.com/model/278668-stove-knob-guard

      Salt / Pepper Grinder Holder. https://www.printables.com/model/155219-salt-and-pepper-grinder-caddy

      Spice Jar Organizer. https://www.printables.com/model/151171-spice-jar-spacer-organizer

      Just to name a few things.

    • @[email protected]
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      1617 hours ago

      Software is free if you aren’t using it for commercial use. Fusion 360, onshape, etc. are all free for personal use. And that’s assuming someone didn’t make it already and share it free.

      Filament costs $17 for 1kg of perfectly fine plastic. You’d probably use 100g at most for this, so $1.70.

      A Bambu A1 mini is $200, and is a modern, high quality printer that would be fine for this project.

      So you only need like a half dozen of these projects to come out ahead.

      • @[email protected]
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        2617 hours ago

        On software SIDE, kinda criminal not to mention FreeCAD, it’s FOSS and runs on Linux, unlike the non-free freemium and paid alternatives

        • @[email protected]
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          1817 hours ago

          But it’s got a long way to go before it’s at usable as the others. Definitely not a good place to start learning cad.

          • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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            1416 hours ago

            No, it doesn’t.

            The recent 1.0 release is actually very good. It is probably better at this point than some of the entry level commercial options and most importantly compared to those is not intentionally hobbled in any way.

            The time for everyone to stop parroting how “everyone knows” that FreeCAD is unusable is… now. You can go ahead and delete that one; it’s time to learn a new soundbyte.

            • @[email protected]
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              8 hours ago

              Come on. The 1.0 release is a huge milestone, but saying it’s better than the entry level commercial options is just disingenuous.

              I have actually switched over to it because I run a small 3D printing business as a side income, which isn’t nearly profitable enough to afford an onshape license, and although Fusion360 has an affordable startup license it simply won’t work on Linux and my hackintosh laptop isn’t powerful enough for cad.

              It is at a point where it is very usable if you are willing to invest the time needed to learn it, but the learning curve is much, much steeper than that of OnShape or Fusion360, especially if it is your first CAD program. There is also a huge lack of beginner tutorials for it, and the documentation is intended for advanced users, which complicates the learning curve even further, because Fusion360 and OnShape have a huge amount of beginner tutorials for them.

              For a hobbyist that just wants to model a few things and not sell them I would always recommend OnShape or Fusion360 over FreeCAD, or even Tinkercad if said person just wants to model extremely simple things.

              • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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                1016 hours ago

                Yes. The 1.0 release was in November. That Ondsel fork in your video was based on, I believe, the 0.22 version.

                The 1.0 release actually prompted Ondsel to shut down entirely, as they are now largely redundant and attempting to monetize a FOSS program was probably doomed from the start anyway…

          • @[email protected]
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            17 hours ago

            Nah it’s a great place to start learning, it’s super easy to start modelling your first simple models in part design.

            It’s the more complex designs where it starts to struggle (or maybe I’m just bad idk)

            • @[email protected]
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              Nah it’s not you, FreeCAD is perfectly usable for something like the above referenced knob but even mid-size assemblies really have problems. I personally find the workflow to be bad and irritating beyond my ability to express in words and I can’t imagine how frustrating it would be as a new user to work it out for yourself while at the same time getting used to thinking of objects as collections of operations. It’s a great lightweight program for people who already know what they’re doing and that value FOSS, though. 1.0 really fixed a ton of the issues, but it still has the “Blender UX” problem that seems to plague all big FOSS projects…

      • @[email protected]
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        217 hours ago

        To be clear, I’m the last one to say one shouldn’t invest in money saving innovation. But the breaking even should be number one priority. I, for instance have all kinds of energy savers in my house that have cost me several hundreds. They’ll only be returned in a few years and I need to manage them properly.

    • ArtieShaw
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      1418 hours ago

      One doesn’t buy a 3D printer to make a knob. One is suddenly presented with a need for a knob (or a thingy, or a flangle, or a twizzlet…) and suddenly remembers, “hey - I have a 3D printer.” Followed by “I wonder if there are any matching designs in one of the several massive free databases of models.”

  • @[email protected]
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    2216 hours ago

    I wish I had pockets big enough to replace the flimsy Bosch drawers in my fridge that start to shatter as soon as you pull just a tiny bit harder than normal.

    • @[email protected]
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      914 hours ago

      There are 3d models for some fridge drawers. I have a Frigidaire with similarly flimsy drawers and found a model for them.