Parametric Cable Organizer (Vase Mode)

June 11, 2024
Description
After seeing @i6o6 “Simplest cable organizer”, I feel in love with the idea of a dead simple cable organization system but ended up wondering if I could make a similar model that would be suitable to be printed extremely quickly using a single outer perimeter in vase mode. This is what came out of this idea, a simple yet effective way to store your cables that can be printed in less than 30 minutes on a Prusa i3 MK3.
Available models
cable-15.stl | |
Model size: 22.8 × 48 × 85 mm Filament usage: 4.2 m (~ 12.5 g) Use: small cables (< 0.50 m) or thinner wires (such as earbuds) | |
cable-20.stl | |
Model size: 27.8 × 48 × 85 mm Filament usage: 4.4 m (~ 13 g) Use: standard cables (~ 1 m / 3 feet) such as USB or Lightning cables | |
cable-30.stl | |
Model size: 37.8 × 48 × 85 mm Filament usage: 5.0 m (~ 15 g) Use: long or heavily shielded cables (1 to 2 m) such as 100W USB PD cables | |
cable-40.stl | |
Model size: 47.8 × 48 × 85 mm Filament usage: 5.6 m (~ 17 g) Use: long (up to 3m / 10 feet) and/or heavily shielded cables such as HDMI cables or USB 3 extension cords | |
cable-50.stl | |
Model size: 57.8 × 48 × 85 mm Filament usage: 6.3 m (~ 19 g) Use: larges cables such Display Port cables |
Need more ?
All the exported models available in this project have been generated using the included Fusion 360 parametric project file (available as cable-organizer.f3d
in the download section). If you need any other sizes or the current height or width of the model does not fit your specific need you can generate any combination of module. Make sure to use the same DovetailWidth
parameter and Width
across all your export if you want them to slot together properly.
Here is the list of the different parameters and their value used when exporting the previously listed models:
Printing
Recommended settings
This project was originally intended to be printed in Vase mode (and can still be) though I would recommend against it if you want to be able to print multiple instances of the same model at the same time.
- Layer height: 0.30mm
- Extrusion width (using an 0.4mm nozzle):
- External perimeters: 0.8mm
- First layer: 0.6mm
- Solid infill: 0.6mm
- Perimeters: 1
- Solid layers:
- Top: 0
- Bottom: 2
- Seam position: Random
- Infill: 0%
- Brim / Raft / Supports: no
- Spiral vase: yes (if printing one model at a time, no otherwise)
As you can see, this print relies heavily on using a high extrusion width value which can be achieved using a 0.4mm nozzle (0.8mm external perimeter extrusion width ended up yielding a 0.72mm wall thickness on my Prusa i3 MK3 with a 0.4mm nozzle for example). Using a larger nozzle would tremendously help with both speed and wall thickness.
Speeding up the print
In order to make this model print as quickly as possible, I would also suggest tweaking some of the printing speed / cooling parameters. Most of the gain in speed comes from the already tweak extrusion width but, by changing some of the printing speed, I was able to achieve relatively good result with a print time less than 30 minutes per models using the following settings:
- Speed:
- External perimeter: 40 to 45mm/s
- Cooling:
- Remove all cooling thresholds in your Filament Settings (set to 0 for Enable fan if layer print time is below and Slow down if layer print time is below). This is the main culprit for a slow print on top of the low external perimeter printing speed.
I have joined a 3mf
file for Prusa Slicer, containing the 3 models sliced and configured to be printed using PLA on a Prusa i3 MK3/S/+ with all the print settings and tweak recommended here already applied.
Changelog
- V1.0 (2022-08-24): Initial release
- V1.1 (2022-09-12): Added 2 more sizes
case-40.stl
andcase-50.stl
- V1.2 (2022-09-27): Updated description, pictures, exported GCode & Fusion 360 source file
- V1.3 (2022-08-29): Added the
Tolerance
parameter to the Fusion 360 source file