Interested in 3D-printing this yo-yo? Grab the files here: Yes Jives Yo-Yo
From Sickburn Yo-Yo Workshop:
Tom Kuhn / BC stopped making No Jives but now you too can live the dream of the No Jive. Modular 3 in one yoyo with the Yes Jives. Slightly modified shape, like a Spitfire and a No Jive had a baby.
Interested 3D-printing this yo-yo? Grab the files here: Keyhole Yo-Yo
From Sickburn Yo-Yo Workshop:
“This is a doorknob shaped yo-yo, it actually plays very well, and is surprising for it’s shape.
It is a challenging print and you will need a well tuned printer and you may need to do a temperature tower first to ensure you have the right temp for the overhangs. It took me a few failures before I got the overhang right. Settings that helped me succeed:
Enable dynamic overhang speeds
Slow perimeters (30 mm/s)
Extra perimeters on overhangs
Avoid crossing curled overhangs
Detect bridging perimeters
I included a 3mf file for MK4S MMU3 that has these settings in it for those with that printer.
It uses a 4mm x 20mm stainless steel shelf pin as the axle. These are the ones I used. https://amzn.to/41RypW. I recommend a tiny drop of super glue in the axle hole then the pin, then the other half with glue as well. If you want it to work well slice it to 54-60 grams weight. Honeycomb or cubic infill for best balance.”
“Is 65g too light for you? That’s ok, float isn’t for everyone! Weighing in at a solid 68.3g, exuding stability and spin power for eons, presenting the King Sago.
The King’s identical 7068 cups are crowned with rims of raw brass instead of stainless steel to increase the overall weight and performance of this royal edition of the Sago.
Classy competition ready.
Are you ready to kick it with the King?”
Colorways
The King Sago is currently only available green with brass rims.
What’s in the Box
Each King Sago comes in a hand-stamped, numbered box, making every piece feel special. Included with the yo-yo is a Zipline ZS Air 100% nylon string, a TRT sticker, and a TRT Series #4 POG.
“Space: the final frontier. These are the voyages of the yoyo Enterprise. Its five-year mission: to explore strange new skill toys; to seek out new throws and new tricks; to boldly yo where no man has yo’d before.
It uses a 4mm x 20mm stainless steel shelf pin as the axle. These are the ones I used. https://amzn.to/41RypW. I recommend a tiny drop of super glue in the axle hole then the pin, then the other half with glue as well. Print at 100% infill or it may not work. If you print it and it doesn’t come back up add a drop of lube or rub some chapstick on the end of your string and after a couple throws it will work just right.
There are two stand models, I would start with the smaller model and use it unless you yours doesn’t fit, then print out the larger one.
It also functions as a mediocre spin top if you get bored with yoyoing.”
Interested in 3D-printing this yo-yo? Get the files here: The Quark, a Yo-Yo
From Sickburn Yo-Yo Workshop:
“This is The Quark, sequel to The Ork and The Dork.
It uses a 4mm x 20mm stainless steel shelf pin as the axle. These are the ones I used. https://amzn.to/41RypW. I recommend a tiny drop of super glue in the axle hole then the pin, then the other half with glue as well. If you want it to work well slice it to 54-60 grams weight.
If you print it and it doesn’t come back up add a drop of lube or rub some chapstick on the end of your string and after a couple throws it will work just right.