Lego-compatible thesis project board: Difference between revisions

The educational technology and digital learning wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 41: Line 41:


7) Is it really necessary to design a custom board that takes time to print ? A standard Lego board could be the favorite solution. That's what one of our PhD students told me after showing him the two on day two of printing....
7) Is it really necessary to design a custom board that takes time to print ? A standard Lego board could be the favorite solution. That's what one of our PhD students told me after showing him the two on day two of printing....
8) Should I create a DUPLO version of the bricks ? Would take much more space, but the lettering would be much nicer and I could even add some icons.


== Board plates ==
== Board plates ==

Revision as of 01:05, 24 October 2012

Draft

<pageby nominor="false" comments="false"/>

Introduction

I designed the thesis project board as a tool that will help folks with both planning and monitoring a Master or PHD thesis. It also is a social tool, i.e. on display in an office or a living room it will show others where your are.

The thesis project board has three components:

1. A task list (made of lettered Lego bricks) that should include all major tasks, such as getting in a program, finding and adviser, writing the research plan and having it accepted, literature review, data collection, data analysis, development, etc. Configuration of this list depends on the field, the nature of the thesis and the institution.

2. An issue list - again made with lettered Lego bricks - that should include each major problem that pops up or that is known right from the start.

3. A text list that simply lists the various chapters.

Monitoring chapter writing and the task list are different views of the "problem" although some items strongly correlate.

Each list is built with special-purpose lettered Lego bricks. Print the ones that you need. Next to each item the candidate then should build towers using standard bricks and that represent its state. Next both task and chapter items, there is a slot for a 2x2 column that will measure advancement. I suggest to use 5 standard 2x2 blocks, each representing 20%. Once you reached 100%, these towers can be replaced by a special "smilie" tower. The issue items are associated with two columns, one that measures severeness and the other progress (problem resolution)

Current status, questions and plans

Current version

This is version 1.x. So far, I didn't test it, but I will do that with local PHD students. However, that can take years :)

However, I'd be extremely glad to receive any sort of comments and suggestions, even little ones such as missing bricks.

Questions

1) I tried to figure out a "good size". The board should be both visible and at the same time not take up too much space. I.e. a person should find space on his/her desk.

2) There are not enough task and issue bricks. Which ones are missing ?

3) Bricks are fairly ugly. Is there a way to do better ? I also am aware that lettering is pretty ugly using 0.25 layers, maybe I should try other fonts. Designing lots of meaningful 3D icons is beyond my skills. Input with respect to that also would be welcome.

4) Is the three lists design (tasks, issues and chapters) ok, or is there some fundamental category I missed.

5) How high should the towers be. I believe 5 x a standard brick height should be ok. 10% steps could be displayed with 2x1 bricks

6) Should there be a repository for bricks ? E.g. a big wall around the board or a specially designed area. I am afraid the people will not keep/find a bad with enough Legos nearby...

7) Is it really necessary to design a custom board that takes time to print ? A standard Lego board could be the favorite solution. That's what one of our PhD students told me after showing him the two on day two of printing....

8) Should I create a DUPLO version of the bricks ? Would take much more space, but the lettering would be much nicer and I could even add some icons.

Board plates

variant 1

Buy a Lego board and configure it like in the picture that shows a blue plate. I.e. print all bricks that start with "board" to make it look like a thesis project board.

Thesis lettering blocks for standard Lego board
Thesis board using a Lego board

variant 2

Uses a neat (sorry) just the right size for you desk. Time-consuming to print and impossible (I'd say) on non-PLA capable printers.

Thesis project board, version 1

Below is my first print together with a first version of tasks, issues and chapter blocks

Thesis project board, version 1

Bricks

Task bricks

12 so far ...

Task brick set 1 (first version)

Issue bricks

9 so far...

Issue brick set 1 (first version)

Chapter bricks

9 so far ...

Chapters brick set (first version)

Getting it

Download

Download from Thingiverse:

http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:33001

File names

I only included a subset of bricks as single STLs for now. However:

  • STL.zip contains all the blocks
  • STL-sets.zip include multiple bricks for printing (difficult)
  • source.zip contains all the source, including netfabb files and openscad code

Printing tips

General

Printing Lego bricks is a bit more difficult than it may seem.

  • You do need a 0.25mm layer-capable printer, and that it includes corresponding x/y precision
  • The first layer must stick to the print bed. Therefore it must be totally flat and aligned with the nozzle. In addition, the nozzle must be close (1 sheet of paper)
  • Printing with ABS probably requires a heated print bed since the walls will try to warp upwards. A heated print-bed is better for PLA printing too.
  • The bottom side of the roofs will likely be ugly and there is not much I could do (except creating a design that doesn't look like Lego bricks)

Printing platforms is another challenge (see below under problems).

Slicer settings

  • First layer must be real slow: 12 mm/s
  • 0.25 layers or less for better quality
  • Other layers: 40 mm/s or much higher for less good quality

You may use manual overrides for printing walls (you can go fast there) and then slow down again for the lettering and nibbles.

Problems

  • Ugly overhangs underneath the lego roofs: ignore
  • Bumps when printing the roof of the big base plate: Slow down and turn of the fan until it looks flat again. This also can happend in the first layer after printing the little squares.
  • Little squares not sticking to the first layer: Nozzle must be real close in every location, slow down, heat up. Instead of aborting a print, you also can attempt to glue it back, e.g. use a blow torch.
  • Ugly lettering: reduce speed and/or reduce layer height (or work with half-layers if your slicer let's you define regions)
  • Unexplained no "filament comes out": Check your filament. If it is too thin in places it will hate the retractions. You also can reduce anti-stringing measures. Strings don't matter in this project. Just burn them away. If it is too thick, buy new filament.

In the picture above with the black board you can see really ugly chapter bricks. These are explained by the fact that I changed a piece in the z-axis and I forgot to place a bolt in the right place. Anyhow, printing perfect lettering with 0.25 layer-width won't work. But I just hate waiting for too long and also printing with 0.1 layers creates other problems, in particular with roofs.

Do it yourself

Creating different boards

Start from the openscad files to generate your own boards. Use Netfabb or some other software for on-board lettering.

Lettering on top of blank blocks

Use netfabb files for lettering. Read the Netfabb Studio tutorial

Download a block or generate one with OpenScad.

Set of blank bricks for lettering

Lettering can be done with other software, but I found Netfabb to be the easiest tool. However, if you don't own the expensive Studio version, you will have to proceed in the following way in order to get a single printable STL:

  • Load an appriate flat lego brick into netfabb
  • Do the lettering: Use 72pts and about 10mm height and 2mm depth
  • Adjust the x/y dimensions and position in the right place
  • Export the lettering (1 or 2 STLs)
  • Import to Meshlab
  • Import all the meshes (block and lettering): Menu file->Import Mesh
  • Menu Filters->Layer and Attribute Management->Flatten Visible Layers
  • File->Export Mesh as

Links

EduTechWiki links

Using Lego in project management and similar

  • Project management classes taught at HES Yverdon (need a paper here).

A very different perspective is to use lego building as substrate for team building, management, etc. E.g.: