
Each of these can take 12-20 hours to print and fails can be discouraging to newbies! Rather I suggest waiting until you have some smaller and easier to complete objects under your belt.

I do NOT recommend this for someone who just got their first 3D Printer for Christmas and is looking for an awesome print to show off their new machine. If not you will need to adjust the hitch file accordingly. That is, print just a few layers of the bottoms of the hitch and the body and check that the rod fits the hole. Please VERIFY the tolerances of your 3D Printer before trying one of these 2 more complex versions. The knuckle file works for both versions. Two versions one for Type 1 and one for Type 3. The body and the hitch are separated to make printing easier. It prints from the flats on the hitch mount and the Coupler body up with supports that will have a nice slanted wall to support, so not too bad. I've included two more versions that are complete with top and bottom and includes a separate knuckle part (you'll need a bolt) for a more realistic look and feel. Then for those of you (like me) that just want to take that 1 step further. One for a Type 1 and one for a Type3 Hitch. The first two versions are made to be printed flat without any supports.

Thanks to the original work by Jeff Mauer (see remix ref) I was able to fairly quickly resize and chop and recombine parts to make four versions of this hitch cover, Knuckle Coupler. I was about to give a friend of mine an old hitch cover that was shaped like a small Railroad Knuckle coupler, when I realized I could probably make a much more realistic version. There are plenty of users who have both an Apple and a Windows device, so with this in mind, perhaps it's time at WWDC for the company to recognize this, and put iTunes to bed.This is my holiday gift to the most awesome online community there is!

ITunes has had its day - it's a relic of an era where we used PCs and laptops to manage our music for our iPods, and for a time, apps for our iPhones. Perhaps this is where the Apple TV app, found on televisions, could come over to Windows 11 to alleviate this, while podcasts could be their own app for both Android and Windows devices. Yet iTunes still offers podcasts and videos that can be bought within the app in Windows, which complicates things.

Translating this to Windows would be a challenge, but as Apple Music is available on Android, there may be potential to make it available to Windows 11 users as an app as well, saving the company from having to support two music apps on two different platforms.Īs Android apps are available as a preview for users in the Microsoft Store, this could make sense for Apple and Apple Music users who don't have a Mac, especially as it's also arrived on Roku devices.
