Some of you that have been watching me a while might recall last October when I showed you 4 of a prior version of these printer boxes.
http://www.furaffinity.net/view/6774919/
Well, we're currently on Rev: 'I' now.
The prior design was rejected since it had hinges that could have their pin removed.
This version is made of mostly 1/2 cell cast acrylic and it is meant to contain a Zebra GX420d printer used for prescription printouts. The reason that Kaiser wants to encase them is people are opening the printer up and taking the paper, and then creating their own drug prescriptions. The printer sits on a pull-out drawer which is lockable.
I built this batch of 12 in 3 days. Supposedly I will eventually built at least 120 of them.
Thirteen parts each not including the locks, fourteen holes, one kerf groove and two rabbets for the drawer slide. All joints are cemented with #3 Weld-On in a specific order, allowed to evaporate and repeated until the right number have set. Then the edges are routed flush and the next parts are attached. From start to finish each one consumes about an hour and 30 minutes of time. Since I rarely am allowed to work straight through without being interrupted 4 boxes usually takes me one work day.
As seen here they need to be cleaned up with Brillianize, edges deburred and the locks assembled and installed.
Under these boxes you see the precut panels for the following project, a box for a local environmental testing company.
http://www.furaffinity.net/view/6774919/
Well, we're currently on Rev: 'I' now.
The prior design was rejected since it had hinges that could have their pin removed.
This version is made of mostly 1/2 cell cast acrylic and it is meant to contain a Zebra GX420d printer used for prescription printouts. The reason that Kaiser wants to encase them is people are opening the printer up and taking the paper, and then creating their own drug prescriptions. The printer sits on a pull-out drawer which is lockable.
I built this batch of 12 in 3 days. Supposedly I will eventually built at least 120 of them.
Thirteen parts each not including the locks, fourteen holes, one kerf groove and two rabbets for the drawer slide. All joints are cemented with #3 Weld-On in a specific order, allowed to evaporate and repeated until the right number have set. Then the edges are routed flush and the next parts are attached. From start to finish each one consumes about an hour and 30 minutes of time. Since I rarely am allowed to work straight through without being interrupted 4 boxes usually takes me one work day.
As seen here they need to be cleaned up with Brillianize, edges deburred and the locks assembled and installed.
Under these boxes you see the precut panels for the following project, a box for a local environmental testing company.
Category Photography / Still Life
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1440 x 1211px
File Size 698.9 kB
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