Turning an Old 3D Printer Into a Vinyl Cutter for Cheap
An article discusses how to convert an old 3D printer into a vinyl cutter using a drag knife. It highlights the necessary components and software needed for the conversion process. While this method is cost-effective, it may require more calibration and has limitations compared to dedicated vinyl cutting machines.
- ▪Replacing a 3D printer’s extruder with a drag knife allows for vinyl cutting.
- ▪The Polycut project helps generate g-code from SVG files for the cutting process.
- ▪This conversion is not a permanent modification and is less complex than adding a laser engraver module.
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
Turning An Old 3D Printer Into A Vinyl Cutter For Cheap No comments by: Maya Posch June 2, 2026 Title: Copy Short Link: Copy Replacing a 3D printer’s extruder with a cutting blade seems like an easy way to do things like vinyl cutting, but you cannot just put on any blade and expect good results. The right type of blade is called a drag knife and it’s designed so that it follows the direction in which you’re cutting. You can get these in dedicated vinyl cutting machines, as well as in the form of attachments for the likes of CNC machines. How to use them with an old Anycubic Mega S FDM printer is demonstrated by [Cocoanix 3D Printing] in a recent video.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Hackaday.