Blast From The Past
Here’s are video from the early days of RepRap experimentation in 2007! Science!
Here’s are video from the early days of RepRap experimentation in 2007! Science!

Elijah Wood decided he wanted a RepRap, but you need a RepRap to make a RepRap so he made a RepStrap RepRap! Then he made a really nice site to document it all. Check it!
When I first met Zach Smith in the summer of 2007, I asked him what he made and he replied that he was working on robots that make robots and I remember saying something to the effect of “Count me in!” and I would go meet him in his very small little workshop that was on the catwalk of a video studio in Williamsburg. We were working on a machine to make machines that could make machines. We made a few videos together about it and then the rest is inevitable history.
Elijah says,
I started this whole RepRap project about a month ago. I got hooked on RepRap right when I saw the Make podcast that Bre Pettis did. I thought I could probably build my own for cheaper and maybe customize it better than I could from a kit. So, I set out to design a RepStrap with parts that I had lying around my house. I built my base out of PVC pipe (which I have tons of) and some basic steel pluming parts (the part that hooks the PVC into the back of the Z axis). I made the X and Y axis frame out of aluminum angle iron. I actually almost copied the McWire CNC design on Instructables Other than the Instructables design, I had to do a lot of research on the axis. I was curious what other RepStrappers were doing. I was deciding for days whether to use the threaded rod drive system or the belt drive. I eventually went for the threaded rod design because I had most of the materials I needed already and because in the podcast Bre used that method. For the electronics, I used the generation 2 Arduino equipment. I used this because I was already familiar with the Arduino way of coding. Some problems I faced were that there are so many versions of code out there so I had to try many different versions and eventually I had to ask on the forums for the correct firmware. Another problem was that the stepper drivers V1.2 kept frying. I’m not really sure why, but I would recommend either getting the newer version V2.3 or buy 1 extra just in case. Other than this, there were no more problems and after some time I did get everything working fine. The total price I paid for the whole thing was about $300. Compared to other designs mine is very crude, but for the price it gets the job done.
Seeing this machine takes me back to a time at the roots of MakerBot and trying to figure out how to make a cheap and accessible 3D printer by strolling the aisles of hardware stores! We still do that!