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Mini Articulating Spine Keychain – 3D printable model from MakerOnline MakerOnline
Household

Mini Articulating Spine Keychain

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These print-in-place “mini spines” are fun to print and feel really weird to hold and move. Use them as keychains, fidget spines, or offbeat decorations. Two five-vertebrae chains are included, one with a loop at the top and one without. Separate vertebrae are provided to make your own chain as long as you want! See here for text embossed vertebrae that can be added to your design: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:4916377. See here for video: https://youtu.be/bVlRynm7T5Y The spines must be printed as oriented, with the spinous processes point up. Changing the orientation of the file will result in improper printing of the inner ball joint between adjacent vertebrae. The transverse processes that stick out sideways to not need support. Therefore, you only need to support the base of the vertebral bodies and the “loop” if you are printing files with a top loop. In order to adequately support the curved bottom surface of the vertebral body, try raising the object 3mm off of the build plate, and using the “Line” support in Cura, with the density increased to 40%. After printing there will be some small adhesions on the inside ball joint and in the facet joints. Just do some gentle spinal mobilization and they will release and move freely. Be sure to let your print fully cool first! If the plastic is still soft, the connector may break when you try to move it. To build your own, import the number and types of vertebrae that you’ll need to the same origin point within your software of choice. Leave the top vertebrae at the origin, and move the rest of the vertebrae back in increments of 15mm (i.e. move the second vertebrae 15mm, the third vertebra 30mm, and so on.) You can make the spine as long as you want, limited only by the size of your build plate. Note that these are not anatomically correct! For design purposes, each vertebra is modelled off of the same vertebra, L3. The vertebral foramen has been filled in to provide strength and minimize overhangs, and the artic
Category
Household
Source
MakerOnline
Published
What you need to print this: Beginner Low confidence
Why?
print-in-place design
Print-in-place
Supports 1/3
Assembly 0/3
Settings 1/3
Bed size 0/3
Post-process 0/3
Printer
FDM / FFF
File format
STL
Material
PLA
Min. bed size
50 mm (Small)
Software
Cura, PrusaSlicer, or similar
Frequently Asked Questions
Which 3D printer is suitable for Mini Articulating Spine Keychain?
Any FDM printer should handle Mini Articulating Spine Keychain just fine. It's been printed on machines like Bambu Lab A1 Mini, Prusa Mini+, Creality Ender 3, most FDM printers. A minimum build volume of 50 mm is recommended.
Does Mini Articulating Spine Keychain need supports when printing?
Nope — Mini Articulating Spine Keychain is print-in-place, so it comes off the bed ready to use. No supports, no assembly.
What file format is Mini Articulating Spine Keychain available in?
Mini Articulating Spine Keychain is available in STL format. These files can be opened and sliced using free software such as Cura, PrusaSlicer, Bambu Studio, or OrcaSlicer for FDM printing, or ChiTuBox and Lychee Slicer for resin printing. The download is provided through MakerOnline.
Is Mini Articulating Spine Keychain free to download?
Yes, Mini Articulating Spine Keychain is available as a free download through MakerOnline. Always check the license on the original platform to understand commercial use, remixing, and attribution requirements.
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