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From YouTube: OSE Working Team Meeting - March 6, 2017
Description
See Development Log - http://opensourceecology.org/wiki/D3D_Meeting_Log
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A
Welcome
everybody
to
the
Monday
morning
meeting
today
is
march
six.
This
is
our
fourth
or
still
meeting.
Let's
go
to.
Basically
all
these
meetings
I
want
to
give
the
perspective
of
what's
going
on
in
the
project
and
then
dive
right
into
the
development
work
so
overview
on
a
development
technique
and
where
we
are
and
then
going
right
into
what's
happening.
A
So
first
of
all
team
people,
so
the
team
is
growing
so
right
now
we
have
myself
Jonathan
Brian,
Emanuel,
Richard,
jean-baptiste
and
Jose
hoorah,
so
we're
at
five
developers
on
the
official
ose
development
team,
the
people
who
have
made
through
the
OS
e
3
cap
test
as
part
of
the
LFC
developers
and
for
anyone
who's
watching
this
go
to
the
lse
developers
page
on
the
wiki,
and
you
can
see
a
little
personal
invitation
there.
I
can't
move
my
can't
other.
It
is.
A
Alessi
developers
join
the
team.
The
the
plan
is
to
to
keep
growing
the
team
in
a
much
more
dedicated
effort
than
we
have
ever
done
in
the
history
of
the
project.
Idea
being
that,
as
you
see,
the
the
team
growing
team
growing
here,
imagine
a
velocity
of
say,
12
teams
of
twelve
pairs,
which
is
kind
of
what
I'm
thinking
after
one
year
of
development,
so
we
can
really
really
increase
the
development
of
what's
going
on
in
a
project.
So
this
is
the
d3d
meeting
log
here.
A
So
if
you
want
to
see
what's
happening
with
the
project,
it's
also
2d
3d
is
the
official
page
for
the
distributor
price
3d
printer
at
the
top.
So
what
are
the
some
of
the
elements
of
the
the
development
platform
here?
We're
using
the
wiki
first
of
all,
but
the
idea
is,
everybody
has
to
know
what's
going
on
with
the
project
s,
so
we
start
the
team
page
with
the
names
of
the
people.
Each
person
has
a
log,
so
you
can
click
on
a
manual
log.
A
For
example,
you
can
see
the
file
that
he's
been
working
on
like
uploaded
freecad
file
right
there
etc.
So
all
the
work
is
being
tracked,
so
everyone
can
collaborate,
the
big
point
being
that
we
build
upon
each
other's
work
and
then
the
common
platform
here
is
the
d3d
log
for
the
meetings.
If
you
click
on
a
d3d
log,
we
post
the
meetings
here,
so
you
can
review
all
the
past
meetings
like
right
now.
We're
recording
this.
A
So
that's
going
to
go
up
here
in
monday
march,
making
sure
I'm
recording,
so
I'm
not
talking
to
myself
here.
Yes,
I
am
so
that
March
next
meeting
recording
is
going
to
come
here.
That's
going
to
be
published
right
after
so
we've
recorded
two
meetings
already,
you
can
see
the
progress
on
all
that's
going
on
to
review
the
technical
aspects
and
everything
else
so
on
a
d3d
page
just
to
continue.
A
What's
on
the
page
itself,
the
way
we
work
because
the
idea
is
once
we
get
a
lot
of
people
on
board-
is
one
of
the
main
challenges
is
going
to
be
project
collapse
in
terms
of
where
is
everything
if
a
lot
of
people
are
developing
and
working
on
multiple
projects?
So
the
way
we
do
every
project
is
for
d3d.
We
break
the
project
down
into
many
modules,
so
here
are
all
the
links
to
all
the
different
modules
we're
working
on.
So
once
again,
this
is
at
the
main
d3d
page.
A
You
can
go
to
all
the
parts
because
different
people
can
work
on
different
parts
in
parallel
because
we're
designing
this
as
module
based
design.
So
that's
that's.
The
idea
wait
and
you
guys
are
not
seeing
that
you
guys
should
should
scream
I
meant
to
be
sharing
my
screen
here.
So
you
can
review
this
if
you
want
to
see
that,
but
so
just
to
just
to
review
that
this
was
the
d3d
page
on
the
wiki
OSD
invitation
to
developers
the
statistics
we're
seeing
the
team
grow
to
five
people
now
we're
also
tracking
the
development
hours.
A
So
this
is
good.
There's
a
timesheet!
If
you
go
to
the
log
like
any
person's
log,
for
example,
emmanuel
you
go
to
this
log
in
there
should
be
a
link
to
a
timesheet.
Everyone
should
have
a
link
to
their
timesheet
to
log
their
hours
every
week,
because
we're
tracking
at
tracking
what's
happening
in
a
project
to
get
good
data
and
everything
that's
going
on
now.
Here
you
know
just
if
you
observe
the
two
graphs,
the
number
of
developers
so
going
from
three
to
five
since
last
week.
A
Congratulations
to
Hosea
and
jean-baptiste,
but
the
hours
here
are
going
from
about
30
to
about
36
that's
kind
of
fishy,
since
we
got
two
more
people.
Well,
that
means
someone's,
not
logging
or
actually
looked
at
the
log.
Only
myself
and
the
manual
have
to
log
their
hours.
So
everybody
on
the
team,
please
log
your
hours,
so
we
can
see
an
encouraging
exponential
spike
here.
Instead
of
that
being
linear,
please
log
your
hours.
We
want
to
track
that,
so
we
can
improve
that
so,
but
continuing
so
on
the
project
itself.
The
latest
statuses.
A
Let
me
not
share
my
screen,
but
let
me
share
the
actual
physical
product,
so
so
a
lot
of
this
is
doing
this
tag-team
between
developers.
And,
let
me
let
me
show
you
what's
in
this
corner
here,
but
this
is
this
is
where
we're
at
right
now,
so
the
axis
of
the
3d
printer,
pretty
much!
That's
that's!
What's
going
on
here,
3d,
printing
and
prototyping
of
the
frame,
that's
a
CNC
metal
cut
frame
with
magnetic
attachments
for
all
the
axes
and-
and
let's
go
back
to
the
screen-
share-
look
at
this.
So
this
is
the
model.
A
This
is
the
manual
once
again,
so
we've
got
the
full
model
in
freecad
parts.
There's
the
axes
than
the
frame.
At
this
point,
we've
got
a
lot
of
different
individual
files.
If
you
go
to
the
d
3d
page,
a
lot
of
the
files
are
under
d3d
integration.
What
we
do
in
order
to
track
where
everything
is,
if
you
click
on
a
d3d
integration,
meaning
the
whole
project.
A
What
we've
done
here
is
broken
down
the
all
all
the
different
there's
like
13
modules
here,
that
we
broke
down
the
frame
and
a
mechanical
into,
so
that
people
can
work
on
that
in
parallel.
As
soon
as
something
is
completed,
a
link
is
placed
into
one
of
these
placeholders,
so
the
idea
being,
if
you
click
on
any
of
these,
these
are
these
are
hyperlinked.
So
we
can
access
the
files
and
the
way
that
you
know
that
people
say
I.
Click
on
that
I
can
go
to
this
file
and
you
see
okay.
A
Last
update
has
been
to
februari
25th,
so
anyone
is
now
able
to
download
and
collaborate
it.
You
see
that
the
last
work
has
been
done
in
the
25th,
how
you
download
it
and
work
on
it,
but
as
soon
as
you
have
anything
upload
it
back
so
that
there
is
no
time
delay
between
what
happens
right
now
and
the
next
person
on
the
team
taking
on
continuing
the
development-
and
you
can
think
about
this-
is
once
we
get
really
good
at
this.
A
We
can
go
into
I'm
going
to
my
log
22
24
7
development
around
the
world
by
tag
teaming.
So
not
only
do
we
tag
team
within
our
team
right
now.
Let's
see,
let's
look
at
the
recent
wiki
changes.
I
post
it
up.
This
is
actually
an
HR
I
put
this
under
the
team
building
page
human
resources,
but
here
I
put
in
like
what
could
it
look
like
down
the
road
look
at
this
people?
A
Can
you
see
that
year
you
can,
but
basically
okay,
so
we're
a
no
se.
Usa
international
here
here
are
g,
10,
okay,
so
USA
China,
Japan,
Germany,
France
so
forth,
but
think
about
once
we
get
good
at
this.
We
develop
teams
so
right
now
we're
operating
out
of
0
se
USA
with
collaborators
who
are
also
in
Europe.
But
once
you
get
enough
people
on
the
team
we
can
go.
You
know
every
say
every
six
hour
difference.
A
We
can
have
a
new
team
pick
up
and
if
we
want
to
translate
the
the
results
from
one
thing
to
the
next,
there
should
be
one
person
on
a
team
who's
like
that.
The
team
connector
the
interface
person
who
participates
in
one
meeting
like
this
meeting
right
now
and
then
participates
to
lead
the
next
meeting
so
that
full
continuity
happens
with
a
full
update
of
what's
going
on
and
so
forth,
and
everyone
is
uploading
things
to
the
wiki
and
we
can
continue
that
kind
of
development
in
a
serious
way.
A
So
some
of
the
etiquette
requires
your
one
as
soon
as
you
have
something
uploaded,
don't
say
to
me:
oh
I'm,
going
to
wait
till
I'm
finished
until
I
upload
that
that's
foul
play
and
no
se
rules,
because
we
want
everybody
to
access
the
work
immediately
after
it's
done
so
it
there's
no
lag
as
far
as
when
the
next
person
can
take
that
work
on
and
the
requirement
there
is
it
somebody
download
the
file
that's
been
just
published.
The
assumption
is
as
soon
as
any
work
is
done.
That
file
is
going
to
be
re-uploaded
like.
A
If
you
take
a
look
at
this
file,
you
can
do
an
upload,
a
new
version
of
this
file
right
there.
So
this
can
continue.
You
can
add
notes
as
far
as
what's
going
on
with
that
file
itself,
but
the
idea
of
being
no
time
delay
between
it.
So
that's
that's
that
and
another
point
of
etiquette
when
we're
communicating
once
of
course,
once
the
team
starts,
growing
is
email
etiquette.
When
you're
sharing
updates.
A
You
know
you
can
update
somebody
on
the
team
by
email
we'd
like
to
go
through
the
osc
Network,
which
is
the
network
that
open
source
ecology,
that
organs
are
official
development
platform,
there's
still
some
bugs
on
that
platform.
So
we're
not
really
releasing
that
to
the
public,
but
we
have
a
3d
printer
group
on
a
network
that
open
source,
ecology,
org
and
we're
communicating.
So
if
you
go
to
the
groups
here,
you
go
through
the
3d
printer
group,
3d
printer
development
and
that's
that's
where
we
communicate.
A
A
A
That's
already
been
uploaded
through
the
wiki,
so
that's
kind
of
the
main
main
development
principle
go
to
the
wiki
as
the
universal
development
platform
and
upload
everything
there
point
people
to
there
so
that
anything,
you
point
to
is
a
public
documents
once
again
for
the
radical,
radical
openness
and
collaboration
here,
make
everything
accessible
as
soon
as
that's
available.
None
of
this
mean
publish
early
and
often
is
the
open
source.
Software
principle
don't
wait
because
that
time
is
potentially
well.
A
If
somebody
else
can
be
working
on
something,
is
there
a
team
member
and
they
understand
the
open,
open
source
platform
all
together.
So
let's
look
at
the
critical
path
here.
What
did
with
the
idea
is
for
the
3d
printer
itself.
The
goals
are
ambitious.
So
right
now
we
have
a
an
april
20
seconds.
We
can
hardly
see
that
here.
Let
me
get
a
little
closer
in
here,
but
this
is
april
twenty.
Second,
as
the
workshop
in
germany
right
now,
the
date
is
pretty
firm
right
now,
3d
printer
workshop
for
the
kickstarter
backers
from
before
april.
A
Twenty
second
hamburg,
germany,
we're
going
to
publicize
that
in
about
a
week,
so
we're
going
to
take
some
video
and
the
machine
working,
etc.
So
there's
some
quick
finishing
and
getting
the
electronics
connected.
But
after
that
we
go,
you
see,
do
all
these
lines
here.
We
want
to
do
a
regular
workshop
on
the
3d
printer
every
single
month,
so
that
is
june
july
august
and
so
forth.
The
the
concept
is
there
is
we're
encouraging
everybody
to
develop
a
3d
printer
with
that
idea
that
they
can
also
run
3d
printer
workshops
themselves.
A
Once
this
thing
is
a
good
product,
solid
product,
so
the
idea
there
is,
we
charge
people
a
certain
amount
of
money
over
the
bill
of
materials,
cost
for
the
experience
and
that's
a
meaningful
via
balada
that
people
can
make
a
living
from
so
we're
looking
at
making
a
regular
3d
printer
workshop
with
osc
happen
every
month.
If
we
get
24
people
to
show
up
to
one
of
those
events,
if
we're
charging,
we
might
be
charging
something
like
maybe
six
hundred
dollars
for
the
event.
A
Maybe
the
bill
of
materials
cost
is
like
300
and
we
might
be
charging
like.
300
for
the
experience
and
extreme
one
day
build
experience.
So
if
you
have
24,
people
show
up
at
three
hundred
dollars
at
7,200
dollars
per
event,
and
that
is
the
way
currently
we're
thinking
that
we
can
get
the
stable
cash
flow
into
the
operation.
Because,
right
now
it's
the
revenue
for
OSC
has
been
very
unstable.
We
do
sporadic
workshops,
they're,
big
and
bold,
like
this,
like
the
house
build
but
they're,
not
regular.
A
We
need
regular
cash
flow
so
that
we
can
plan
and
plan
on
building
the
team
and
plan
on
putting
more
energy
with
an
own
budget
that
we
have
for
operations.
So
that's
the
idea
that
the
3d
printer
would
be
our
first
regular,
very,
very
regular,
ongoing
event,
followed
by
I.
Think
that's
going
to
be
the
ceb
press.
The
brick
press
is
going
to
be
our
second
product
and
we'll
see
what
else
rolls
out
from
there.
A
So
the
big
golf
on
a
3d
printer
front
here
is,
if
you
go
to
December
2017
at
the
end
of
the
air,
we
are
planning
on
a
grand
3d
printer
workshop,
USA
Europe,
probably
China
or
Japan,
but
we're
talking
about
now
filling
an
auditorium
of
people
building
the
3d
printers,
so
a
hundred
3d
printers
in
a
single
day.
Let's
think
about
that
right
now,
the
global
production
of
3d
printers
is
500,000
about
it's
a
about
half
a
billion
dollar
market
right
now,
if
we
produce
a
hundred
in
a
single
day,
that
is
very
significant.
A
If
that
starts
taking
off
that
that
model
itself
of
the
social
production
where
people
are
where
these
3d
printers
are
now
not
built
in
factories,
so-called
or
small
operations,
but
as
public
events,
that's
the
goal
to
show
that
this
this
model
of
community-based
production,
the
social
learning
experience,
is
a
vehicle
model
for
all
kinds
of
products.
That's
a
big
deal
that
could
be
the
next
economy.
It's
a
big
concept
because
people
are
hungry
to
produce.
If
you
produce
it
yourself
by
the
big
motivation,
there
is
by
default.
A
That
then
becomes
a
pretty
much
a
lifetime
design
product
so
say
goodbye
to
planned
obsolescence.
As
when
you
build
something
you
really
controls,
because
you
can
maintain
it,
then
for
the
rest
of
your
life
that
especially
like
a
3d
printer
or
something
like
a
cordless
drill,
you
build
it
yourself,
3d,
printed
and
so
forth.
You
can
replace
parts
and
keep
it
lasting
forever,
like
we
point
out
cordless
drills
because
we
go
through
them
like
cotton
candy
here
I
mean
they
they
last
about
a
year
or
two
around
here
and
someone's.
A
You
know
the
chief
drills
we
get
last
like
three
months,
then
you
throw
them
out
so
end
to
that
and
to
like.
If
you
talk
about
three,
you
know:
3d,
printing
and
printing,
cordless
drills
right
there,
cordless
drills
are
a
billion
dollar
market.
You
know.
Imagine
substituting
that.
So
this
is
open
source
product
development
and
open
source
markets,
substitution
of
throwaway
goods
with
lifetimes
last
time,
design
much
more
appropriate
goods
I
mean
just
adjust
the
cordless
drill
right
here,
I
mean
that's
a
billion-dollar
market
right.
A
There
is
so
significant
impact
that
can
be
had
so
in
in
general.
That's
why
we're
excited
about
community-based
production
as
a
way
to
produce
things
where
then
people
become
the
true
masters
of
Technology
and
technology
in
general
becomes
appropriate
technology
as
opposed
to
throw
away
kind
of
crappy
technology
that
doesn't
help
the
world
in
general,
because
it's
polluting,
let's
throw
away
it
leads
to
consumerism
and
so
forth.
So
let's
take
the
economy
to
the
next
level.
A
So
that's
a
brief
central
to
the
way
we
work
here:
module
based
design,
Oh
everything
is
published
on
the
wiki
and
so
forth.
So
so,
let's
get
right
into
that.
I
think
that's
enough
theory
for
now.
So
let's
get
right
into
the
development
work.
So
maybe
Emmanuel
can
you
update
us
where
we
are
on
the
the
frame?
So
here's
what
what
I
have
on
the
frame
itself
I'm
going
to
share
my
screen.
So
that's
the
that's!
The
3d
printed
3d
printed
parts
here,
the
full
designs
and
freak
out.
Where
are
we?
A
A
A
Excellent,
so
we've
got
that
as
well.
What
is
your
plan
for
the
week
is?
Do
you
have
more
to
do
arms
up
on
the
project
in
terms
of
integrating
the
bed
and
starts
and.
A
A
B
A
A
B
A
Okay,
well,
that's,
but
that's
pretty
good,
though
I'm
pretty
decent,
there's
a
little
bit
of
discrepancy
there,
because
that
that
nozzle
there.
That's
not!
That
looks
like
an
e
3d
nozzle,
though
the
one
we're
using
is
a
just
a
simple
one.
So
a
little
detail.
There
should
probably
change
that,
but
let's
let's
open
that
up
and
freecad.
So
the
good
thing
is
we're
using
freak
out.
So
it's
openly
available
open
formats.
So
anyone
can
download
and
work
with
these.
So
now
we're
going
to
have
to
convert
that.
A
A
B
A
Yes,
okay,
so
one
of
the
things
we
have
to
pay
attention
to
as
this
loads
up
here
is
making
sure
that
everything
is
free,
cad
native
format,
as
opposed
to
like
mesh
or
other
okay.
That's
that
looks
pretty
nice
that
looks
impressive,
but
yeah
the
nozzle
itself
we're
going
to
have
to
probably
modify
that,
but
that's
a
that's
a
good
deal.
That's
good
looks
good
that
our
nozzle
is
much
simpler,
so
actually
we
have
to
go
so
now.
If
we
go
okay,
how
do
we
know
what
the
deal
is
we
talked
about?
A
So
if
we
go
to
okay,
let's
see
so
I'm
recording
the
screen
here,
it's
kind
of
because
of
those
boundaries
on
the
screen.
I
can't
grab
the
edges
now
too
easily.
Okay,
so
here
if
we
go
to
arm
extruder
saudi
3d,
so
if
you
go
to
you
know,
where
do
you
find
this
work
here?
So
it's
d3d
and
then
go
to
the
extruder.
So
here
the
hardware
modules
be
3d
extruder.
So
we
pointed
to
the
idea
that
this
is
what's
the
RB
om
bill
of
materials.
A
Yeah,
so
we
need
to
just
update
that
there
and
so
that
that's
how
the
extruder
would
fit
in
this
carriage,
which
is
mounted
on
the
X
carriage.
So
that's
the
idea
here
we're
using
this
mathematically
connected
to
carriage
piece.
Ok,
so,
let's
see,
let's,
let's
see
what
we
can
do
in
terms
of
work,
work
breakdown,
because
the
ideas
for
the
meeting
we
go
2d
3d
logs.
So
we
want
to
divide
tasks
and
see
if
we
have
all
that
we
need
to
keep
moving
forward
now.
A
C
A
A
Maybe
recent
rename
your
old
ladka
graphics
law,
because
even
really
about
graphics
as
their
graphics
lead,
you,
you
know-
and
maybe
just
puts
your
log
and
starting
with
all
this
work
here
on
the
D
3d
project.
So
that's
the
idea
and
by
the
way,
I
don't
know
if
you
know
since
you're
from
Chile
there's
a
the
Fab
17
or
you
know,
the
Fab
Lab
conference
is
happening
in
Chile
this
year.
I
think
you
know
about
that.
Yeah
I
think
I
think
that's.
A
So
the
3d
pays
just
be
3d
log.
Let's
talk
about
what
we
can
break
down
as
the
main
main
task,
so
so
right
now,
I'm
in
a
process
of
building
like
I,
wanted
to
connect
the
electronics
and
get
that
going
working
at
least
one
axis,
like
probably
by
tomorrow
today
or
tomorrow
today,
actually
had
a
bunch
of
other
things
to
do
so.
I
might
get
to
it
tomorrow,
but
next
thing
is
to
start
connecting
the
electronics
and
the
probe.
A
What
we're
missing
right
now
is
the
software
part
not
like
it's
a
big
deal
because
Marlon
the
open
source
software
is
well
developed,
including
the
ability
to
do
hike
probing,
but
someone
just
has
to
do
that.
Make
sure
all
the
configuration
is
proper
and
everything
else,
the
idea
being
for
the
specific
configuration
that
we
have
all
the
different
pulleys
and
size
dimensions.
A
D
A
D
A
D
D
D
A
A
A
A
B
D
On
da
la
vics
on
the
would
give
us
some
of
the
on
the
DD
d,
three
DP
age,
there's
I
think
the
links
gotta
be
61
ever
that's
something
minor,
but
I
guess.
The
main
thing
for
me
is
I'm
trying
to
get
the
frame,
that's
a
big
part
and
then
and
all
the
rest
of
the
parts
which
I
should
was
he
helping
me
done,
but
I
got
the
free
casting
test
out
of
the
way
so
I
complished,
at
least
very.
A
A
A
A
What
idea
was
to
get
33
frames
out
of
one
for
this
very
small
one?
We
could
actually
probably
do
it
could
be
usable,
but
since
we
have
six
of
them,
we
can
actually
put
them
like
next
to
each
other.
So
you
could
make
the
small
3d
printer
is
8
by
16
inches,
which
still
gets
you
pretty
bubble,
we'll
see
about
it
anyway.
A
The
set
of
those
three
cutouts
150
bucks
from
a
CNC
shop
and
one
of
the
things
we
can
do
as
a
team,
actually
so
say
we
want
to
take
this
down
to
Chile
or
two
main
or
to
the
Republic
of
Texas.
We
should
actually
get
local
sourcing
quotes.
What
I
would
recommend
that,
if
you
go
to
so
this
is
one
you
know.
If
we
talk
about
practicality
of
replication,
that
is
a
significant
point.
Can
people
cut
out
the
axis
and
y
metal
will
metal
because.
A
If
I
show
you
so,
if
you
look
at
the
little
3d
printed
pieces,
they've
got
these
they're
magnetically
attached.
We
put
little
super
magnets,
which
are
eight
pounds
each
and
that's
pretty
good
hold
like
right
now.
If
you
look
at
my
my
screenwriter,
the
3d
printer
there,
the
axis
is
holding
pretty
well
so
I
think
that
in
itself
works
quite
well,
but
we
need
a
metal
frame
for
that
which
is
nope.
Nobody
else
is
doing
that.
I,
don't
know
any
people
who
are
using
steel
frames.
A
I
know
that,
for
example,
lulzbot
is
aluminum
and
all
the
other
ones
are
non
frames,
they're
just
kind
of
like
skeletons
so,
but
we
do
want
to
do
that.
So
let's
so
I
would
actually
encourage
all
of
us
if
we
could
all
do
that
so
from
Chile
to
everywhere
else,
I
mean
basically
the
local,
so
well,
okay,
let's,
let's
back
up
a
little
bit,
I
okay,
because
we
want
to
make
this
in
the
back
of
my
mind-
is
a
goal
that
says:
d3d
is
the
distributed.
Enterprise
3d
printer
distributed
meanings.
A
We
make
it
easy
for
anyone
in
the
world
to
do
this,
so
this
becomes
an
amazing
product
that
more
people
get
involved
in,
because
the
barriers
to
entry
are
so
low.
Part
of
that
is
getting
too
localized
part
sourcing
like
we
can
get
the
3d
prints
pretty
easily
by
a
3d
printer.
We
can
give
those
nuts
and
bolts
and
rods
easily
and
electronics
they're
all
widely
accessible
everywhere,
but
a
thing
that
isn't
is
the
frame:
that's
local
custom
cut
so
that
we
could
get
all
of
you
to
to
actually
do
that.
C
C
A
A
The
first
step
would
be
a
quote
for
what
that
single
thing
would
cost.
So
that's
in
America
we
had
four
by
eight
foot
sheets
four
feet
by
eight
feet.
Let
me
see,
are
you
guys?
Are
you
guys
not
saying
it
here?
Let
me
show
share
my
screen
again
in
America
were
four
by
eight
feet
and
we've
got
this
frame.
A
Now:
okay,
there,
it
is
nested
three
sets
of
frames,
which
is
a
really
good
way
to
go
with
lower
waste
of
material,
but
when
you
think
about
it,
the
advantage
here
is
this
is
one
unique
part
count
for
the
frame.
That's
a
world
record.
One
unique
part
comes,
that's
good!
That
means
you
simplify
this
to
the
point
that
you
can
then
begin
to
imagine
the
large
large
builds
where
there's
hundreds
of
people
building
these
in
principle,
I
think
we
can
match
on.
D
A
A
A
Let's
see
what
else
is
relevant
on
this
page
here,
so
here's
an
example
of
the
magnetic
mounting
this
is
all
I
mean
this
is
back
from
facebook
under
OSC
workshops,
Facebook
page,
but
right
here,
for
example,
you
see
the
connection
is
strongly
by
just
holding
on
to
those
magnets.
I
was
able
to
pick
up
the
entire
metal,
which
is
seven
pounds
not
too
heavy,
but
considerable.
You
can
pick
up
the
entire
metal,
but
you
just
hang
up
the
through
the
magnetic
connection
by
picking
up
the
metal
piece,
the
3d
printed
piece.
A
So
what
we
can
do
here,
let's
start
a
section
here
for
local
sourcing.
This
could
be
a
crowd
challenge
for
everyone
watching
this
video
for
anyone
watching
this
video
take
this
file
and
email
that
to
a
local
cnc
metal
shop,
meaning
a
metal
shop
that
has
a
CNC
plasma
or
torch
table
cnc
torch
table,
meaning
that
they
can
cut
that
out
from
thin
steel.
So
the
idea
is
in
America.
We
used
11
engage
actually
this.
A
What
I
have
right
here
is
10
gauge,
which
is
0
point
13
inch
for
metric
sizes,
I'm,
not
sure,
what's
the
standard
size
of
a
sheet,
but
three
millimeter
would
be
about
the
right.
That's
about
one
eighth
inch.
This
is
nominally
one
eighth
of
an
inch
so
and
if
use
your
cut
request
template,
please
provide
a
quote
and
turnaround
time
for
CNC
cutting
of
the
attached
file
cut
from
four
by
eight
sheet.
A
11
gauge
I
need
six
of
those
nested
sets,
as
shown
in
the
file
which
take
a
total
of
thirty-two
inches
long
of
a
96
inch
long
sheet
more
notes
on
this
on
the
wiki,
so
you
can
send
them
a
link
to
the
wiki
and
here's,
the
download
of
all
the
files
and
here's.
The
notes
on
the
outer
square
is
16
inch
outer
size.
A
The
middle
is
12
inches
outer
sides.
So
that's
no
problem
to
make
little
3d
printers
out
of
that
for
the
8
inch.
If
we
do
do
that,
we
probably
have
to
mount
the
access
on
the
outside.
But
that's
that's
the
idea.
If
you
get
this
I
mean
it's
going
to
cost
you
some
money
and
if
you
don't
have
it,
then
you
don't
have
it,
but
this
is
definitely
worth
pursuing
because
then
okay,
so
it
was
$150.
A
A
Now
most
of
the
cut
time
goes
to
loading
up
the
file,
putting
on
the
piece
of
metal
and
so
forth.
So
I,
don't
imagine
the
price
for
the
entire
sheet
being
much
more
than
seventy
dollars,
I'm
estimating
probably
a
hundred
dollars
or
even
seventy
dollars,
and
because
it
really
once
you
have
everything,
set
up.
The
CNC
cutting
is
a
smaller
part
of
the
deal,
so
let's
say
a
hundred
bucks
for
that.
A
One
hundred
664
the
metal
itself
you're
talking
about
about
two
hundred
fifty
dollars
or
so
a
little
more,
but
if
you're
getting
nine
sets
of
frames,
or
at
least
six,
if
you
use
the
outer
and
little
so
st.
300
/
6
is
50
bucks,
a
frame
so
not
super
cheap,
but
very,
very
competitive
for
what
you
get
I
mean
after
you
put
these
together.
They
are
very
strong
and
the
concept
right
now
how
you
put
them
together-
and
this
is
what
I've
done
on
this
one
here-
wait.
D
A
A
A
A
A
So
it's
under
twenty
bucks
per
frame
once
you
have
the
CNC
torch
table,
which
is
very
reasonable,
I'm,
actually
not
sure
what
the
folger
tech
crew
saw,
the
the
aluminum
extrusions
are,
but
I
don't
think
there
actually
any
cheaper
there
about
two
dollars,
I
think
maybe
two
or
four
dollars
a
foot.
If
I
remember
it's
two
dollars
of
foot
two,
four:
six,
eight
ten
loads,
it's
about
twenty
dollars
for
the
folger
tech
crew
said
at
which
we
did
last
year.
So
it's
not
any
cheaper.
A
If
you
use
the
aluminum
and
the
solid
cubic
frame
gets
you
an
incredible
strength
and
the
way
to
build
that
is
you
put
the
bottom
piece
on
in
the
four
sides?
Hold
them
together,
put
a
piece
of
five-minute,
epoxy
dribble,
five-minute
epoxy
upon
the
top
corner,
and
that's
it
and
let
it
fall
down
the
edge
as
far
as
it
gets
too,
and
that
gets
you
a
lot
of
coverage.
It's
basically
five-minute
epoxy,
which
is
3,000
psi
strong.
A
A
You
just
bolt
it,
but
if
you
hold
it
using
a
little
clamp
or
magnetic
angle
in
the
upright
to
just
hold
the
thing
together
to
the
drop
of
epoxy
on
each
top
corner,
the
epoxy
drifts
down
by
gravity
down
the
corner,
which
is
a
perfect
90-degree
corner
because
it
seems
to
cut
and
very
precise,
and
that
could
be
it
so
in
a
few
minutes.
So
we
basically
you
do
that.
You
led
the
tox
be
dry
as
you
move
on
to
other
steps
during
a
build
and
then
you've
got
the
finished
ring
relatively
easy.
A
For
me,
it
was
hard
because
the
epoxy
I
used,
I
had
to
smear
it
across
all
the
cracks.
I
didn't
think
about
the
idea
of
letting
the
gravity
do
it.
I
can
say
that
doing
it
by
hand
and
having
to
sneer
all
the
tracks
that
takes
an
hour
of
time
which
might
be
acceptable
but
kind
of
finicky,
because
if
you
bumped
it
by
mistake
and
you
you
know
Satan
say
you
can
of
course
count
on
that
happening
during
a
workshop.
A
If
you
mess
up
a
frame
during
during
the
build
time,
it
could
be,
in
some
cases
a
real
mess
and
hard
to
recover,
because
you
got
partially
dried
epoxy
and
it's
all
messy
and
stuff,
but
I
think
the
single
drop
on
the
upper
corner
plus
gravity
that
might
be
the
way
to
go.
So
I'm
going
to
do
that
again,
I'm
going
to
get
me
a
nots,
well
at
least
build
them
interior
set
using
that
technique.
A
A
For
us,
you
want
to
have
the
reliable
CMC
cut,
because
if
you
do
that,
you
can
talk
about
the
idea
of
building
a
hundred
these
in
a
single
day
as
a
reality,
not
something
that's
far-fetched.
It
makes
me
think
of
Tony
Robbins
having
a
whole
stadium
of
his
participants.
I
think
we
should
do
that.
What
do
you
think
guys
have
a
big
event
and
use
the
entire
football
field
or
a
stadium
and
have
like
a
thousand
made
in
a
single
day?
I
would
like
that.
A
So,
let's
see
if
we
can
do
that
a
little
later,
but
basically,
if
you
talk
about
a
notion
of
something
like
that,
that's
a
huge
logistical
nightmare
unless
you're
thinking
very
carefully
about
the
modularity
aspects
and
everything
here,
like
the
frame
being
one
unique
part,
count
plus
a
tube
of
epoxy.
That's
doable
at
that
point.
So
things
like
that
and
then,
as
you
see
on
the
frame
itself,
we've
got
the
the
same,
identical
axis
element
on
the
XYZ
axis,
so
absolute
redundancy
of
parts
so
so
making
it
very
easy
to
do.
A
Turn
around
time
was
I
emailed
them
on
on
Monday
night
and
I
had
the
cut
in
my
hands
on
Friday
they
delivered
to
me,
so
that
was
great
for
a
very
simple
job
like
that.
It
only
should
take
a
couple
of
days
if
they're
not
busy,
they
can
do
the
same
day
or
whatever
it
depends
on
how
busy
or
CNC
shop
is
so.
Can
you
guys
do
it
John?
Can
you
do
that
for
chili?
Would
you
have
all
the
info?
You
need
again.
C
A
A
A
A
Laser
or
water
jet,
those
are
all
widely
accessible
technologies
like
oxy
fuel,
which
is
oxy-acetylene,
could
be
oxy-hydrogen,
whatever
oxy-fuel
plasma,
laser
water
jet.
So
I'm
sure
there's
more
than
one
definitely
more
than
the
one
in
maine
I
mean
this
is
very
common
industrial
technology,
unless
main
is
really
an
agrarian,
a
knee
or
something,
but
now
I
everyone's
got
that
in
the
United
States,
so
yeah,
and
besides
that,
let's
let's
go
back
to
so.
Let's
do
that
guys
and
then
and
anyone
else
who's
watching
it.
A
So
if
you
watch
this
contribute
to
the
project
that
would
help,
because
we're
trying
to
spread
this
all
over
the
world
make
this
the
most
widely
replicated
thing
in
the
world.
If
it
works,
I
mean
the
idea
is
we
want
to
make
it
easy
for
everybody,
as
this
thing
is
working
and
there's
no
evidence
that
says
it
wouldn't
work
so
far
that
what
we
have
done
is
great.
The
axes
are
working
excellent.
The
idea
that
you
can
have
the
same
access
for
all
the
axes,
that's
a
great
idea
and
so
forth.
A
A
A
Yeah
we
want
to
put
the
whole
thing
together
such
that
we
can
go
from
like
if
we
make
an
instructional
video
or
a
promotional
video.
We
can
get
a
nice
render
and
a
nice
exploded
part
animation,
and
things
like
that.
So
for
that
you
want
to
be
as
complete
as
possible.
So
do
I
would
say:
do
one
possibly
do
two
versions
with
where
one
is
like
the
simplified
version
and
the
second
one
like?
A
Maybe
you
don't
have
all
the
bolts
in
there
because
it
might
be
really
slow
to
manipulate
and
the
other
one
is
to
complete
with
all
the
details.
So
it's
like
fully
technically
correct
and
everything
that,
but
but
since
we're
still
testing,
how
capable
free
cat
is
to
do
that
like
it,
because
idea
is
that
it
might
slow
down.
So
much
is
just
really
painful
to
work
with
so
keep
the
two
routes
open,
but
definitely
get
much
of
a
complete
perfected
model.
A
That's
good
for
publicity
reasons
not
only
for
real
build
instructionals,
but
also
for
publicity
like
rendering
that
in
blender,
for
example,
or
and
blender
modifying
that,
so
you
can
show
how
you
can
like
scale.
This
extend
this
on
one
axis
or
another
axis
that
could
be
a
graphics
project.
You
know
at
that
point.
Once
we
have
the
CAD
file,
we
can
get
a
blender
person,
so
we
should
recruit
for
some
blender
people
to
the
team,
but
then
they
can
manipulate
it
like
make
animations
or
make
modifications
in
blender
once
they
have
the
technically
correct
base.
A
How's,
the
color
scheme
may
be
kind
of
looks
weird
right
now,
maybe
make
it
more
more
realistic,
like
maybe
bluish
or
black,
because
it
have
it
probably
paint
the
frame
black
as
black
beauty,
maybe
differentiate
the
rods
to
be
metallic,
color
and
so
forth,
because,
right
now
aesthetics
are
a
little
not
there.
We
should
make
it
or
maybe
we
can
give
it
to
somebody
else
to
finish
up.
Maybe
you
do
the
technical.
A
So
that
would
be
a
perfect
task.
I
mean
since
we're
pretty
decent
on
a
technical
front
here,
I
think,
given
your
skill
set
right
now,
I
think
we
could
definitely
use
that
so
Emanuel
we're
going
to
have
finished,
frame
and
frame
CAD,
plus
integration,
okay,
so
Richard
who's
not
on
here,
but
we
should
be
looking
for
a
blender
guy,
recruiting
a
blender
guy
to
find
recruit
a
blender
person,
because
we
could
really
use
some
help
on
that,
or
maybe
we
know
Cedric.
Maybe
Cedric
could
do
that.
A
So,
let's
put
Cedric
to
render
it
or
wants
to
complete
some
collaborate
with
emmanuel,
but
once
the
complete
frame
is
there
once
again
a
manual
on
your
log
to
make
it
easy
for
everyone,
just
upload
yeah
on
the
running
bases?
Don't
you
know
as
soon
as
you've
done
for
the
day
upload
that
thing
so
that
that
would
be
important
for
the
blender
guy
like
say
you
guys
are
working
together.
Then
you
can
you
know
the
blender
guy
could
get
started
as
soon
as
possible
with
the
rough
sketch
and
then
they
can.
A
A
So
infographic
yeah
that'll
be
good,
and
for
that
we
should
basically
start
with
the
on
the
internet.
We've
got,
you
know,
usually
what
you
should
do
is
start
by
going
through
all
the
information
that
we
have.
A
And
then,
especially
like
the
parts,
breakdown
and
kind
of
talk
about
the
main
features
so
like,
for
example,
the
frame
one
part
count
frame,
there's
there's
magnetic
attachment
of
the
tool
head
is
magnetically
attached,
that's
a
cool
feature,
I
mean
completely
modular
design,
modular
scalable
as
normal.
The
wiring
system.
If
you
look
at
the
controller,
I
mean
we're
going
through
this
radical
cat5
wire,
the
ethernet
wire
for
all
the
wiring
to
make
it
and
Quick
Connect
plugs.
A
A
While
being
high
performance
but
by
high-performance,
the
big
thing
that
we
have
here
is
the
the
bed
does
not
move
the
prusa
and
the
lows,
but
both
of
those
the
bed
moves.
That
is
not
good.
If
you
talk
about
printing,
lock,
large
tall
tall,
thin
structures,
because
when
the
bad
moves,
you
shake
the
structure
and
gets
jagged
edges,
and
it
just
fails
towards
the
top.
So
we
have
the
XY
all
the
motion
up
in
the
gantry
so
means
no
moving
bed.
A
The
otha
maker
is
the
only
one
that
really
gets
that
one
right
and
I
actually
actually
a
MakerBot
that
evil
make
about.
Actually
they
they
got
that
right
because
they
don't
have
a
moving
bed
either,
but
most
of
the
3d
printers
right
now
have
moving
beds,
which
is
not
a
good
design.
Once
you
want
to
get
like
a
lot
of
stuff,
we
print
is
going
to
be
tall
stuff,
like
fence
posts,
plumbing
for
houses.
Those
are
going
to
be
printed
vertically.
We
need
the
vertical
capacity
and
then
enclose
a
bowl
structure.
A
You
can
close
it,
so
it's
so
it's
warm
inside
and
therefore
it
comes
down
to
energy
use,
because,
if
you're
saving
that
heat
you're
going
to
end
up
being
much
more
cost
effective
cuz,
the
concept
is
right.
Now
it
costs
fifty
cents
per
pound
of
print
in
electricity
costs.
I
think
that,
with
a
close,
that
I
did
that
and
actually
calculate
that
recently
or
you
can
read
the
paper
by
Joshua
Pierce
about
that.
It's
about
50
cents,
a
pound
of
print.
A
That's
a
lot
of
cost
for
heavy
prints
like
if
you
want
to
print
out
a
fence
post.
That's
three
pounds,
though
it
cost
you
a
dollar!
Fifty!
If
you
want
to
print
out
a
two-by-four
plastic
piece
of
lumber,
that's
10
pounds
will
cost
you
five
dollars
and
electricity.
That's
a
lot,
so
we
want
to
reduce
that
I
would
say:
the
enclosure
probably
gets
you
down
to
as
good
as
twenty-five
percent
of
the
energy.
A
So
you're
talking
about
huge
savings
once
you
can
enclose
the
print
so
that
you're
saving
electricity,
because
you
don't
have
to
constantly
heat
the
bed
and
heat
the
extruder
as
much
so
so
that's
those
are.
Some
of
the
features,
and
then
we
should
probably
go
through
once
you
study
it
like
kind
of
look
at
the
things
like
see.
What's
what
school
to
you
but
I
think
that
I
mean
the
main
thing
is
the
Construction
Set
approach
and
I?
A
Don't
know
how
much
you've
heard
about
the
idea
that
the
same
structure
can
be
used,
the
same
design
principles
to
do
much
larger
axis
or
frames
where
the
there's
one
inch
rods
or
even
two
inch
rods
so
currently
we're
using
eight
millimeter
rods,
which
is
five
sixteenths
of
an
inch
tiny,
but
you
can
scale
them
up.
One
inch
to
two
router
or
a
fancy
course
table
2
inch
for
heavy-duty
machines.
So
that's
actually
on
the
plan.
A
A
few
months
from
now
the
exact
same
technique
that
we're
doing
all
we're
doing
is
we're
printing
larger
parts
and
putting
much
heavier
rods
and
using
larger
steppers
and
instead
of
steppers
hydraulic
motors
talking
about
heavy-duty
serious
business,
making
engines
things
like
that.
So
the
Construction
Set
approach
is
huge
for
anyone
who
can
appreciate
it
and
once
again
designing
it
for
social,
build
social
production,
extreme
manufacturing.
A
A
Okay,
so
we've
got
a
few
people
missing
on
a
team
that
you
see,
we
need
to
go.
Do
all
things
to
Jonathan
anything
on
your
side.
A
I
mean
we're
just
using
the
DVD
excluder,
that's
in
the
building
materials,
which
is
right.
There
just
use
the
simple
one
as
we
did
last
time,
which
is
if
you
go
to
BLM
on
d3d
extruder.
Oh,
it's
just
a
simple
one.
This
is
regular.
Mk8
deal
that's
easily
accessible
at
the
motor
mounts
in
that
little
motor
bracket
that
we
have
simple
good
enough
for
now.
It
works
it
just
can't
do
the
high
temperature
plastics,
like
poly
carbonate
or
rubber,
so.
A
That's
that
so
now
we're
obviously.
D
A
Health
I,
don't
know
it
depends
what
they
want,
but
they
probably
want
just
the
bottom
one.
The
top
one
is
for
reference
because
it's
got
the
dimensions
in
there.
The
bottom
one
just
has
a
nested
piece,
that's
it
and
yeah
what
you
guys
think
about
the
bolts,
vs
epoxy,
you
think
epoxy
is
doable
in
a
workshop
scenario.
A
A
Yeah,
the
frame
can
be
permanent,
I
mean
you
can
grind
it
with
a
grinder,
but
yeah
you
wanted
I
mean
the
disadvantages
that
if
you
want
to
flatten
it
up
for
shipping,
you
gotta
cut
up
cut
up
the
frame
so.
D
A
So
you
got
a
good
point
there,
because
it's
somebody
say
somebody
goes
to
the
workshop
and
they
got
a
ship
it
back
because
they're
traveling
I
know
there's
a
couple
of
people
that
support
the
Kickstarter
they're
from
they're,
coming
it
from
other
countries
like
Turkey,
actually
yeah.
That
might
be
an
issue.
So
maybe
what
we
want
to
do
on
this
is
we
get
the
bulk
of
the
bolt
holes
in
there
too,
just
as
an
option,
so
people
could
either
bolt
it
yeah,
that's
actually
pretty
good,
oh
yeah
yeah.
A
D
A
I
mean
that
once
you
get
so
many
magnets
on
that
edge
there,
it's
pretty
solid.
The
won't
look,
as
you
know
as
clean,
would
be
just
a
little
more
messy.
It's
it's
doable,
but
we
have
to
make
some
decisions
on
how
to
do
it.
I
think
it's
kind
of
I
don't
know
the
practice
of
it.
Is
you
need
a
bunch
of
a
bunch
of
those
magnets?
It
takes
a
little
bit
of
time
to
do
that,
not
not
too
much.
It's
probably
a
half
an
hour
job.
It
makes
you
the
frame
more.
A
A
A
A
A
So
we
put
all
these
holes
in
them
in
the
metal,
because
piercing
is
a
hard
part
and
metal
cutting,
so
they
charge
you
more,
for
that
typically
starts
trying
to
avoid
that,
but
just
to
have
like
you're
talking
about
eight
holes
per
piece.
So
you
got
two
on
each
side
and
there's
six
pieces
as
48
holes.
D
A
A
A
A
Right,
yeah
yeah.
Well,
I
guess
I
would
have
to
get
more
magnets
because
I
only
got
like
a
hundred
thirty
magnets
here.
I
wasn't
really
thinking
about
that,
but
it's
doable
add
a
little
bit
of
extra
expense
expenses
like
24
bucks,
not
too
bad
I
mean
it's
quite
acceptable,
but
if
you
want,
you
know
if
you're
really
really
trying
to
go
for
low-cost,
you
can
do
it.
Otherwise,
so
you
might
have
different
options.
So
question
would
be
do
we
support
all
three
options
as
acceptable,
so
maybe
what
we
should
do
is
yeah.
A
A
Depends
I
talk
to
you
get,
but
there's
epoxy
that
becomes
workable
within
20
minutes
or
even
there's
some
that
are
setting
up
in
one
minute
ya
like
like
really
quick,
but
the
one
minute
define
which
is
called
like
an
instant
like
the
five
minute.
I
mean
that
really
wouldn't
get.
You
have
to
mix
it
a
couple
of
times,
so
so
the
quick
stuff
which
sets
in
20
minutes
that
would
get
you
enough
time
to
grab
it
on
all
the
corners.
You
know
what
this
involves
down,
because
we
should
try
all
the
options
and
say:
okay.
A
A
What
I'm
going
to
do
here
is
I'm
going
to
get
another
quote
for
the
one
with
the
holes,
because
I
do
want
to
explore
the
route
of
just
doing
the
angle
brackets
that
are
bolted,
but
it's
not
going
to
look
as
clean
or
anything
like
that.
It's
gonna,
you
know
right
now
the
frame
looks
really
really
neat
and
professional.
A
A
A
That
would
be
interesting
because,
if
you
don't
have
so
for
welding,
the
thing
that
why
you
can't
do
it
in
an
auditorium
is
because
it
has
spatter
and
it
you
catch
on
fire,
but
spot
welding
is
clean.
That
doesn't
a
different
machine.
We
could
Wow
interesting
yeah,
we
can
I
would
say
we
go
actively
to
find
out
what
the
deal
with
spot
welding
is.
A
A
What
how
much
time
does
it
take
to
do
each
route?
That's
the
kind
of
stuff
we
want
to
provide
some
solid
data
on
man?
Okay,
sounds
good,
oh,
so
what
else
we've
got
Jose
around
then
make
the
meeting
here.
Okay,
but
that
sounds
like
like
we've
got
plenty
to
do
for
each
of
us
and
whoever
has
not
did
the
time
she's
done.
The
timesheet
please
do
that
Cedric
I
know
has
an
dumb
mad.
A
So
please
fill
in
the
timesheet,
because
the
ID
on
the
timesheet
is
I'm
not
making
any
numbers
up
if
it's
not
recorded,
that's
the
data
that
goes
on
the
graph,
because
we
can't
pull
information
out
of
thin
air,
so
that
graph
is
an
accurate
graph
of
the
hours
logged
on
the
timesheet.
Now,
that's
the
only
thing
otherwise
to
wrap
up
here.
So
Emanuel
finish
up
the
CAD
Richard
I'm
meeting
with
Richard.
Tomorrow
we
have
the
HR
human
resources
stuff
meeting
tomorrow
at
1pm
Cedric
will
have
to
check
in
with
him
John.
C
A
A
A
But
if
we
want
to
do
custom
calibration
procedures
which
make
it
automatic
calibration
like
fully
there's
ways
you
can,
we
need
to
do
some
programming
on
that,
so
anyone
who's
listening
to
the
programmer
join
the
team
here
right
now,
we
would
have
the
capacity
to
do
automatic
bed
leveling
using
off-the-shelf
code,
but
you
have
to
still
calibrate
it
like
once
using
a
procedure
that
takes
a
little
bit
of
time.
We
can
automate
that
procedure
if
we
do
some
custom
coding,
so
that's
the
invitation
for
the
electronics
or
the
control
code.
A
So
that's
that,
let's
see.
A
The
man,
okay,
I,
think
he's
got
what
he
needs
and
Jonathan
whatever
you
find
on
that.
If
you
assess
that
the
spot
welders,
please
add
that
to
to
your
log
or
two
to
the
d3d
page
on
the
frame
that
would
help
yeah
we
should.
We
should
consider
that,
because,
if
that's
a
cleaner
out
to
do
it,
it
could
be
a
good
even
as
a
backup
or
something
you
know.
A
You
know,
or
even
if
you
spot
weld
it
in
one
place
and
then
you
just
dribbled
epoxy
is
the
way
to
get
it
down
the
whole
edge
and
stuff.
What
we'll
see,
but
that's
definitely
a
live
thing,
because,
as
far
as
the
schedule
goes,
we
gotta
do
the
announcement.
The
latest
latest
is
the
20th,
so
it
means
exactly
two
weeks
from
now.
The
announcement
is
out
so
this
week
is
getting
the
machine
running
and
taking
some
initial
video
getting
info,
graphics
and
things
next
week
is,
is
like.