Jakob, Tom, and others interested, Autodesk's Meshmixer is a very nice free program that gives you a good degree of control for making solid and hollow objects for 3D printing. I use it with Chimera regularly for crafting molecular model prints. There might be others, but it is hard to beat "free". Best, -Chris ------ Christopher J. Fennell Assistant Professor Oklahoma State University Department of Chemistry W: 405-744-5665 fennelllab.okstate.edu
On Apr 15, 2016, at 2:29 PM, Tom Goddard <goddard@sonic.net> wrote:
Hi Jakob,
We discussed the excessive STL vertices in atoms and bonds last week and I put a fix into the daily build and release candidate.
http://plato.cgl.ucsf.edu/pipermail/chimera-users/2016-April/012134.html
Apparently you are not using those versions since your images show the high vertex density. I’ve attached an image using the current Chimera release candidate that shows reasonable vertex density.
Unfortunately eliminating internal structures and stitching together meshes for atoms, bonds and ribbons at the seams is very difficult. Yes $10000 CAD software packages can do it but we don’t have the resources to solve that problem. Since every 3d printer has to deal with this problem I expect the printer software to be able to handle it, but perhaps it is too hard a problem for the 3d printer companies as well. Perhaps there is free software that can eliminate internal structures and stitch mesh intersecting edges together, I have not researched it — I’d start looking at MeshLab.
Tom
<stl_mesh.png>
On Apr 15, 2016, at 4:33 AM, Jakob Suckale wrote:
Dear Chimera developers,
Chimera has the great feature of STL export, very useful for 3D printing models for research and teaching. May I make two suggestion to improve this feature even further.
1 - Remove invisible internal and therefore unnecessary structures.
Chimera generates a lot of internal structures that complicate printing and are pointless for STLs. This includes inside surfaces at the end of ribbon cartoons (red below). <Screen Shot 2016-04-15 at 13.24.44.png> as well as copious amounts of invisible internal surfaces for wire and ball and stick models. <Screen Shot 2016-04-15 at 13.27.36.png> If these were automatically removed, STLs would not only be much smaller but also much easier to print without remashing.
2 - Reduce the number of vertices for atom models.
Ribbon conversion to vertices is already good, but as can bee seen above atom models are converted using far too many vertices inflating the resulting STL files. I'm aware that this has been discussed and listed previously as a bug but the problem remains and makes for difficult to use STLs and bad 3D prints.
Best regards,
Jakob Suckale, PhD Lecturer in Biochemistry University of Tübingen +49-7071-29-73363 _______________________________________________ Chimera-dev mailing list Chimera-dev@cgl.ucsf.edu http://plato.cgl.ucsf.edu/mailman/listinfo/chimera-dev
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