Printing some replacement coins for a vintage toy register set (pictured register is an internet photo for reference). I noticed a little ‘gotcha’ with one of the STLs that I downloaded. The ‘10’ coin had a part that was at a different Z height than the rest of the parts. I didn’t catch it, and it started printing goobers around layer 7 or so. Let that be a lesson to everyone. ALWAYS look at how your slicer brings up the first layer (and any other areas you may be concerned about). Some of them are an easy fix.
Btw, no glue needed. Since I calibrated the filament, the disks snap into a groove in the coin and fit snugly. Awesome dimensional accuracy. missing/deleted image from Google+
Oh man I remember these! I didn’t think they’d be old enough to be called “vintage” though.
@_Spice
I’m a child of the 80’s. It’s a toy of the 70s. It’s vintage to me. Either way, it’s 50 years old. It can almost get a senior discount. 
@Daniel_Jackman I just didn’t think they were that old. Seeing the decade it was made throws it into perspective
@_Spice yup. It’s 1974 to be exact. So I guess I was wrong. It’s 44 years old, not 50.
Cool!!


