User:Jschust5: Difference between revisions
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<li style="display: inline-block;"> [[File:Jason makerspace.jpg|thumb|none|300px | <li style="display: inline-block;"> [[File:Jason makerspace.jpg|thumb|none|300px|I don't always wear a dress shirt and tie to the Makerspace, but when I do, you know I was photoshopped!]] </li> | ||
I don't always wear a dress shirt and tie to the Makerspace, but when I do, you know I was photoshopped! | |||
'''Jason Schuster''' | '''Jason Schuster''' |
Revision as of 18:36, 13 January 2018
Jason Schuster
MakerSpace Ninja
Graduate Student
PhD Candidate
Biomedical Engineering
Lab Website: Biomechanics of Growth & Remodeling Lab
Email: jschust5@tulane.edu
Profile
Maker Skills:
- 3d Printing, Laser Cutter, Lathe, Mill, Woodworking, Sand casting
- Welding: TIG, MIG, Stick, & Oxy-acetylene
- CAD - Solidworks, AutoDesk Fusion 360, Pro/Engineer CREO, Geomagic/Cubify Design
- CAM - AutoDesk Fusion 360
- 3D Printing: Cura, Sprinter Firmware, Slic3r,
- Graphics - Inkscape, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, GIMP
- Programming - LabVIEW, MATLAB, Mathematica
- Learing - Slicer for Fusion 360, blender
- Makerspace Training Certifications
Tulane Makerspace Project Portfolio
Exorcist3D Youtube Page
In 2013, I built my own opensource 3D Printer. I modified the Prusa i3 design. Controlled by: Arduino Mega + RAMPS 1.5 with Sprinter firmware. The frame is made from 1/4" laser cut steel plates and 3/4" lathe turned rods. The build surface is heated and 10" x 10" x 10". Recently, I made several improvements and upgrades, which include a large screen graphical LCD with SD card reader and a genuine E3D titan extruder and V6 Nozzle. Future upgrades include a BL Touch auto level and dual extruders.
Videos of my opensource 3D printer I built
1934 Southbend Lathe Restoration & Projects
Over Christmas break 2017, I machined some small parts for my lab. These parts are cannula, used to mount soft tissues on our inflation-extension test device. The material is PEEK plastic, it can be auto-claved and machines nicely. Check out my YouTube link above, there is a quick video of the PEEK being machined. The lathe I used is a 1934 Southbend 9" Workbench 405. This lathe is a restoration project I completed in 2010.
Last Update
JasonS 13 January 2018