3D pushchair for disabled two legs
3D printers that can be made to replace people with disabilities and animals are no exception. Through a campaign called Wheels for TurboBoo to find the forged legs of a four-week-old Chihuahua with congenital defects, Mark Deadrick, the company's president and chief engineer, used a MarkerBot printer to create a car. Fit a small dog with this image based on shared via Twitter.
The TurboBoo and the new trolley are printed with a 3D printer. To
Deadrick printed a light orange 3D model, added two Rollerblade wheels and sent it to the TurboBoo owner. Interestingly, Deadrick built the car to fit in with TurboBoo's body only through images shared by its owners. Deadrick is in San Diego while TurboBoo is in Indianapolis and he has no chance of being measured directly. Now, the little dog was able to move, run more easily with his two hind legs and the trolley sent by Deadrick.
Before that, the owner of TurboBoo has made a similar trolley with materials such as water pipes, canvas, etc. ... However, with the trolley is printed 3D, it is customized according to the body of TurboBoo, can be reprinted and even edited by other designers. Deadrick said he used the MakerBot Replicator 3D printer and took only four hours to create the product.
This is not the first time that 3D printing has made life for animals and people better. Not long ago, a 6-year-old boy was successfully paired with a 3D printed arm. In January, designers created a duckling's feet and a penguin at the Warsaw Zoo in Poland.
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