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My experience with my printer thus far had taught me that those two concepts are not mutually exclusive in the world of 3D printing. Now that I had an the kinks worked out (at least it made sense in my head) I needed to transform my 2D scribblings into a 3D model that my printer could both understand, and produce. all pieces must fit together without the use of visible hardware (see goal 1) My goals: -stay as close to the game models as possible -make all fingers articulate, realistically. this took a few days of deep thinking and planning, but in general, below is a list of what I was hoping to accomplish.
![warhammer 40k 3d print files warhammer 40k 3d print files](https://spikeybits.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/3d-disco-1.jpg)
I fixed it in my mind that the working parts would be made from 3D printed plastic and got to sketching.
![warhammer 40k 3d print files warhammer 40k 3d print files](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/07/1e/9f/071e9f37050f53c90361842ca477d485.jpg)
My wife had recently bought me a Solidoodle2 3D-printer for Christmas, and I was actively looking for projects make with my new toy. I simply could not fathom a way to create a working foam finger that would be durable, and stay as close to the game model as I had envisioned. Foam is a great medium, but things like wall thickness, and a lack of real structural stability make it difficult to creating mechanical parts with it. It looks great, but after some thought, I decided to take things in another direction. MY PLAN Henrick made his powerfist out of foam. Henrik is a huge inspiration for me and my build, and a swell guy in general. INSPIRATION Inspiration struck me after seeing a super talented fella by the name of Henrik Pilerud, make his own Power Fist.