Altoids Tin for Holding Small Drill Bits.
by gnomedriver in Workshop > 3D Printing
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Altoids Tin for Holding Small Drill Bits.
This is a 3d printed liner for an Altoids tin for hold small drill bits.
Supplies
An Altoids tin with contents removed and eaten.
Some felt.
A peanut butter sandwich for lunch.
Start With a Box With Rounded Corners
I used Inkscape to draw a box with rounded corners with these dimensions.
93 mm X 59 mm with a corner radius of 12 mm
imported the STL Inkscape file into Tinkercad.
Look around as there are some object models online
for Altoids tins that can be modified.
I made the flat image 18mm thick, copied it. The second image I reduce by 5 mm all round so I'd have
2.5 mm thick walls.
Turned this into a hole
Dropped it down, merged and Bob's ya uncle, a tray.
Now We Can Add Dividing Walls to the Tray
I made the dividing walls about 2 mm thick.
I also added 2.5 mm diameter columns and placed them at each corner to
give rigidity.
The Dividing Walls Should Look Like This
How to Make Hole Text So the Hole of 0 Doesn't Fall Out
step 1) type text
step 2) put a divider (green) through the centre of 0
step 3) turn the green divider into a hole
step 4) merge. You should have a line through 0
step 5) place on to the bit you want the hole text
step 6) turn text into a hole
step 7) merge and you'll have hole text and the middle of 0 will not fall out
I divided the tray sections into the different sizes of drill bits
Final Touch
3d Printed the tray with PLA filament
100% fill
I had to sand the bottom edges of the tray to help slide it into the tin
I had left a small lip between the top of the tray and the lid of the tin.
The top of the tin is lined with felt to stop the very small diameter drill bits from jumping from section to section.