So apparently today is pancake day. I found out a little late for breakfast, but was still in time for breakfast for dinner.

And as its pancake day I’ll leave you with the catchiest song of all time, that happens to pancake related:
So apparently today is pancake day. I found out a little late for breakfast, but was still in time for breakfast for dinner.

And as its pancake day I’ll leave you with the catchiest song of all time, that happens to pancake related:
I am the first to admit that most of my hobbies are realistically not the most efficient or effective way of handling something. Smart lighting and home automation are a convenience at best and really don’t provide enough utility to be a necessity; Sous-vide while amazing is not going to replace your stove or even a microwave oven; but this week I was able to take a step towards a future I hardly believe in, but many boldly claim might be an upcoming reality: home manufacturing.
With the popularity of 3D printers many media sources are calling this the start of the home manufacturing revolution. A new way of life that will be as big a change to our way of life as the industrial revolution. While I am very skeptical about this and building and operating a 3D printer has taught me that there are many, many obstacles in the way before this will be close to a reality. 3D printers today are very limited, very expensive, very slow and fairly unreliable, not to mention nowhere near as efficient as a large manufacturing run. But this week I showed myself that there is potential for a home manufacturing revolution.
As I spend most of every day sitting at a keyboard poor ergonomics and the cost of them is a real concern. Well it seems i had not been giving it proper attention as this week I started developing the wrist pain that comes from too much keyboard use. After aching through a day at work I came home and realized that I did not own a proper reinforced wrist brace to slap on until my wrist was better and I had made the necessary ergonomic improvements. While these can found online and in most drug stores I remembered a design I had seen that I wanted to try. 3D printing a wrist brace.
![DSC00776[1].JPG](https://aclashofcoasts.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/dsc007761.jpg?w=620)
3D printed wrist brace
![DSC00774[1]](https://aclashofcoasts.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/dsc007741.jpg?w=620)
The wrist brace being printed
![DSC00775[1]](https://aclashofcoasts.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/dsc007751.jpg?w=620)
A flat and formed wrist brace
3D printers will probably not be as popular as the inkjet for decades to come, and editing a model in CAD will never be a simple a writing up a document, but there is potential for 3D printing and home manufacturing to replace as least some mass manufactured products.
I have finally received most of the parts for a future project of mine. Last year as part of a Special promotion for May the 4th I purchased a kit for a nearly screen accurate Storm Trooper costume. I have now received the first box containing the helmet and all the hard plastic pieces and I have started to realize that this is a project of significant scale. In order to lay out all the armor pieces I have to add two leaves to our dinning room table. All the pieces are straight from the vacuum forming press and need to be cut out before assembly of the armor can even begin. My current hope is that I can get it all finished before the fall where between conventions and Halloween I’ll have some good opportunities to wear it.

The contents of a Storm Troopers closet