I think two repositories requested authentication (even over HTTPS) but were just empty mirrors. I was able to download 213 of the 218 repositories in my list – all but:
- source/gnuwin32.git
- source/FOO-openwrt-feed-routing.git
- source/py2app/
- source/sip/
- source/pyobjc/
du reports 46 GiB total.
I did have some trouble with cloning some of the really large repositories over HTTPS. I had to use SSH for those (replace “https://” with “ssh://git@” in the clone command). For that you need a Phabricator account and an uploaded SSH public key. But new accounts have to be approved by an administrator, and I doubt that’s been happening in these past three weeks.
The modular carriage is an open system, and Aleph Objects isn’t the only company that made/makes tool heads for it. IT-Works 3D and the Colorado Printing Project have made some nice tool heads, and my company Libiquity might make some as well.
The Yellowfin (Dual Extruder Tool Head v3) bill of materials says it uses hot ends from E3D, but they don’t look like any standard E3D hot ends. They seem to be custom (as suggested also by the E3D part numbers in the BoM: CC-AO-GUN-AS-LH and CC-AO-GUN-AS-RH). The stock nozzle on the LulzBot Dual Extruder is LulzBot’s usual 0.5 mm, so that’s probably a V6 nozzle. I’m not sure if the hot end is compatible with Volcano nozzles. In any case, E3D has assembly instructions that show how to install their nozzles onto their hot ends.
EDIT: The support page for the LulzBot Dual v3 hot end specifies E3D V6 threading, so it looks like Volcano nozzles won’t work.