It might be catching and data mirrioring. When you run something as large as google there are hundreds of servers that need to be synced. Deleting large chunks of data can take an extremely long time to propagate.
It might be catching and data mirrioring. When you run something as large as google there are hundreds of servers that need to be synced. Deleting large chunks of data can take an extremely long time to propagate.
If you have the cash bamboos are 100% worth the upgrade. I’ve printed more on my carbon in 6 months then I have on my other machines in 3 years.
The speed is amazing but the reliability is what really makes it shine. Being able to press to on a 24 hour print and knowing that it’ll come out flawless has been such a time changer.
Yeah this is my print from last year. The funny thing was I never knew the moon just doesn’t come up at night for weeks straight until I built it. I had to wait a bit to catch it.
Can’t wait for Jupiter and Saturn to pop back up this year.
Not to bad actually. There’s a pretty detailed guide https://www.printables.com/model/224383-astronomical-telescope-hadley-an-easy-assembly-hig
Hardest part was learning how to colminate the mirrors so everything is perfectly aligned. It took a few days of printing.
Really well actually. I printed this last year and I haven’t had to fiddle with it since.
It’s a Hadley 114 telescope. https://www.printables.com/model/224383-astronomical-telescope-hadley-an-easy-assembly-hig
Brass nozzles also have trace amounts of lead in them. It’s a miniscule amount but if you’re going for absolute food safety you may consider a steel nozzle.