Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Education

Video The Foundry Will Soon be a Makerspace in Bellingham, Washington (Video) 35

Video no longer available.
The Foundry has people, tools, machines, and a place to operate. The only thing it lacks is insurance, and insurance is a problem because Chief Creative person Mary Keane's vision for The Foundry includes children instead of limiting membership and machine use to people over 18. Other makerspaces have managed to allow children, so it's likely that Mary will find appropriate insurance before long and get the doors open. Besides being a creative space for children, not just adults, Mary is excited about having The Foundry use recycled plastics in its 3-D printers, which hardly any makerspaces do right now, although many are surely interested in this way to lessen their impact on the Earth. (Alternate Video Link)


Tim:
So Mary, we have here your logo for a makerspace called The Foundry.But what is the existent status of The Foundry right now?

Mary:Currently we have a location and we have a lot of machinery, and a lot of knowledge to support that machinery.But our doors are not yet open.We’ve got a couple of things to finish up before we can open our doors.

Tim:Can you talk about what some of those things are?What are the obstacles between now and a working makerspace here in Bellingham, Washington?

Mary:Well, most makerspaces only allow you to join if you are 18 years or older.And we are trying to make a makerspace that is safe enough to allow anyone to come in.So that’s our challenge, is insurance hurdles.But we are getting there.

Tim:So what kinds of changes or accommodations make it possible to allow people under 18 to function without a problem?What sort of accommodations do the insurance companies want?

Mary:Now we need to be able to lock down some of the more dangerous machinery so that only people that have been checked out in our space in the use of the machinery are able to turn them on and actually utilize them.There are two ways that we are going to doing that:One is just physically structuring the shop in such a way that children can come in and can do a number of hands-on activities at the classroom tables but they may need to be accompanied or they are probably going to be using RFID tags to be able to open up the doors that will get into the larger space, where we will have a large number of 3D printing machines.We will also have CNC milling and laser cutting.

Tim:Now let’s talk about some of the things that you’ve got.One thing, you have a very interesting kind of printer that’s quite unusual that uses paper as its basis. Talk about that a little bit.

Mary:Exactly.There are several different ways that 3D printing is possible.The most affordable machines that are starting to become available for most people are the fused filament type machines. That’s what this machine here is.This is an Afinia H3 machine. It is currently printing on an ABS plastic that Legos are made of.So it heats up the plastic and lays it down in a nice thin layer and builds it up from there.Those are the majority of the machines.There is a new machine that’s made by a small company in Ireland and it is a paper printer.I don’t know if you can show that paper piece.It is about right there.

Tim:Hand for scale, okay?

Mary:Right.

Tim:Describe that to me.

Mary:That machine is really unique.It takes technology that has been around for years but it is all combined into one machine.So you load in a ream of paper just like you would load into a Xerox copier.That machines makes the color, it does the color printing, and then it also cuts into out, puts on a layer of adhesive and then lays down another layer of paper.And so your resolution is literally paper thin.And four color printing.By the end you have essentially got reconstituted wood.So the materials are nontoxic which is very different than a lot that make plastics.It is much less expensive to run.It is easier to recycle a lot of materials that then become waste.In order to utilize whatever you have printed, your model you only need to seal it.

Tim:Can you show that upfront and show me how it seals with it? What is the density of it?

Mary:Certainly, certainly.So this is the paper model here, this one is unsealed and left unsealed so that you can see it, but it really truly is just layers of paper—this side is sealing a little bit better. Also that it is colored actually colored all the way through the model.

Tim:It is really pretty early, you can’t really do that yet even with the multicolor 3D printers with ABS plastic.

Mary:No. Not with the fused filament.

Tim:It can do different colors at a time, right.

Mary:That’s correct.That’s correct.This one actually is displaying the stress pattern of this little connector rod.So, yeah.

Tim:A lot of things you can do 3D models and then expand them intophysical objects.

Mary:Absolutely.And really that’s what the makerspace is about.There are several.This is kind of an up and coming business model.And what we really intend to be is a community hub to share skills.So it would be run like a gym, a gym membership.So you pay a membership fee and you come down and you can utilize the machinery.And as we grow, as we grow our memberships, then we also grow our knowledge base.We hope that our members will also be giving workshops. And then that allows us to support a much wider variety of applications, a much wider variety of tools and usage.

Tim:Let me ask you one more question which is:Besides the use of the paper based printer, which would give you really a pretty different kind of media, you are also concerned about the recyclability and the life cycle of the plastic that is used in more conventional 3D printing.Talk about that a little bit.

Mary:Absolutely.Currently, the 3D printers, the fused filament 3D printers, require filament which is essentially plastic string.So melting down the plastic and extruding it into filaments that then can be fed through the machine.Most of the companies are using brand new plastic to make this filament.We already have enough plastic on our earth.We really really can reuse it.So my friend, Liz Havlin, has a project through the Northwest Center that she has built an extruder machine and she has been able to print through recyclable plastics.The number is on the bottom of the plastic.She actually has printed in numbers 1 through 7.We do have a couple of favorites.One of them is PET which is the plastic water bottles because they are so very very common and really should be utilized.The other one is the number 5 plastic because that one actually is food safe.And that one is very rarely recycled.But there is a capability to do so.

Tim:Using that you can actually make a food safe container using your own equipment and design.

Mary:Absolutely, absolutely.And when there is one small gap in closing that full circle and having something that you no longer use, chipping it up, extruding it into filaments, and printing out what you do need.And that little piece is, in order to extrude quality filament, we really need to move from plastic pellets.And going from chipping up that plastic to making pelletsis quite a toxic process at the moment.So we are working with The Plastic Bank up in Vancouver, Liz’s project.We don’t have it going just yet but we intend it to be the sort of recycling program where people can bring their raw materials to us, and we will then give them filament to print, recycled filament to print on their machines.One of the things that is special about this particular program is that we will also be color sorting the plastic so that you will be able to have a nice brilliant blue that’s recycled plastic.Or a nice red recycled plastic.And that’s unusual.Usually everything is thrown in together and that is kind of murky grey.

Tim:It is really good to see the infrastructure emerging not just from the US,but other places too in the plastic for 3D printing, and you have got the corn based and you’ve got more colors coming out and some qualities like conductivity.I think that’s really exciting.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

The Foundry Will Soon be a Makerspace in Bellingham, Washington (Video)

Comments Filter:
  • by viperidaenz ( 2515578 ) on Tuesday May 13, 2014 @05:22PM (#46993783)

    Can't they have their legal guardians sign the liability waivers?

    • Because anyone under 18 will immediately use the maker space to try to create a weapon or something that explodes.

      It's a known fact. And, I'll bet just about everyone here can confirm it from their own youth.

    • Can't they have their legal guardians sign the liability waivers?

      The waiver won't silence the news of a child being severely injured by a laser, milling machine, etc.

      I don't know how you frame a waiver that will stand up in court if a child under your supervision loses control of an inherently dangerous machine he was clearly too young and inexperienced to handle.

    • by dbc ( 135354 ) on Tuesday May 13, 2014 @06:36PM (#46994311)

      It is driven by the insurance companies. TechShop has had various policies over the years I've been a member, all driven by the insurance provider. The day the insurance got turned on for TechShop #1, my daughter, (then 7 or 8 or so) and I went in to help demo drywall and so forth to start the shop build out. Later, the minimum age became machine-by-machine, and always with a parent/guardian present. Laser cutters and sewing/surging machines had a minimum age of 12 at one point, and at the same time the Bridgeports had a minimum age of 16. Not sure about other machines. Not sure what it is now -- it tends to change as the insurance carrier thinking evolves -- and insurance is, as you would imagine, a big line item on the expense side of the P&L.

      So, remember, we are talking insurance company thinking here, so normal common-sense thinking does not apply. The thinking is driven by statistical tables, recent legal settlement amounts, and the personal gut-check of the lead underwriter's visceral fears. Given all that, I think TechShop has had a reasonable experience with insurance, despite my daughter not being able to get at many of the machines for age reasons.

      Unfortuantely, there is no "brain check" that can work -- I used to each one of the safety-and-basic-usage classes (SBU's) for one of the machines. It is designed to make you safe to use the machine, and in my experience age has little to do with how safe a person is. There was one 50 year old mechanical engineer who had obviously been a paper-pushing engineer for 25 years, because during one incident the main thought going through my mind was: "Good God, man, can't you *hear* that is a *very* unhappy machine???", while other people with much less background were safer to be around.

      • The FAQ for TechShop is:

        Q Can my kids work on projects and take classes with me at TechShop?
        A See here for our complete family policies.

        Kids and young adults (12 to 17 years of age) can work on projects at TechShop under the direct supervision of a parent or legal guardian if they are included in your membership (call and ask about our Family Membership offers).

        Many classes at TechShop are open to kids and young adults (12 to 17 years of age) when they are taken with their parent or legal gu

        • by dbc ( 135354 )

          Good find. Like I said, the policy is periodically updated, driven by insurance.

    • by Skynyrd ( 25155 )

      You can sign anything, but you cannot sign away the rights of youth. If a kid gets hurt after a parent signs a waiver, it's meaningless. Even for adults a waiver isn't really a valid document, and at best it shows a jury that the adult knew the risks.

      This certainly isn't the only maker space that allows kids. This article is so unrelated to slashdot, I can only assume that the person who approved it has a vested interest in this particular space.

      • So if I let my kid light some fireworks and they exploded and blew off his hand, I can sue the fireworks company despite me supervising and directing the youth to perform the task?

        • by Skynyrd ( 25155 )

          You can sue anybody you like. For any reason. You may not win, and you may even have a hard time finding an attorney to take the case, but you can sue.

          Did your kid sign a waiver to light the fireworks?

  • What? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Vokbain ( 657712 ) on Tuesday May 13, 2014 @05:45PM (#46993949) Homepage
    Wtf is The Foundry? Wtf is Makerspace? Who cares about this? Why is this news? Usually postings at least have some sort of point to them, but in this case I can't figure out what that may be!
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by GMFTatsujin ( 239569 )

      Makerspaces are places where people--either the general public or a group of paying members--can gather together and make things. Makerspaces usually have an abundance of tools, materials, and places to work on hands-on projects. They typically celebrate open source, notions of hacking technology, and playful misuse of technology to do interesting things.

      Think: informal, engaging, creative spaces where you can collaborate with people to make things.

      Here's a blog I wrote with good pics: Quelab - a Communit [blogspot.com]

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      "Makerspace" translates from Douche to English as "public or members-only workshop for DIY enthusiasts".

    • The only thing I know about Bellingham, WA is that was where they built the Michael , the ship that defeated the Fithp

    • Wtf is Makerspace? Who cares about this? Why is this news?

      A Makerspace is a community workshop, usually with digitally controlled fabrication machines, plus more conventional tools. It's a place where you can go to make stuff. Shared tools are less expensive than buying all of them yourself.

      The relevance to Slashdot is you use computers and software to design items, and then drive the 3D Printers, CNC Mills, etc. The relevance to humanity in general is when the machines start making parts for each other and become networked. It will be a new way to organize pr

    • You missed the key element. The title includes the text "(Video)". I.e. there is no content here, but somebody managed to find a way to stretch this lack of content out from a 5-6 sentence PR piece into a 20-25 minute video. Just skip the whole thing.

  • This is why we can't have nice things in this country. Litigation sucks!!!
  • by hurfy ( 735314 )

    No idea who Mary is but she should ask the guys in Spokane where they got insurance that includes minors. Sorry, that is about all I know about ours but I did see that much on an update once.

  • What exactly is the benefit in using recycled plastic in 3D printers? It's such a tiny fraction of our total plastic usage. I'd prefer to print with high quality plastic.

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

Working...