Printing a vase with FUS3D Printer - My home made 3D Printer

Built this printer back in early 2012 for ~$200 using recycled parts, this was during the time when this technology was not yet in the mainstream and the commercial 3D printer was at least $1800 FUS3D - a DIY - home made 3D printer. Made from easily obtainable parts, cheap but fully functional, and doesn't break the bank. Parts list below (not the actual parts I used, these are alternatives): https://amzn.to/36gcsCN - RAMPS 3d printer controller https://amzn.to/37t5f2s - 3d printer hotend extruder https://amzn.to/39tyvb3 - 3d printer heated bed https://amzn.to/2FdCDxU - 24vdc power supply https://amzn.to/2FaQyEX - Nema 17 to T8 Acme Lead screw coupler https://amzn.to/39uNu4C - 608-2RS 8mm bearing https://amzn.to/2rL3mPj - Stepper Motor Nema 17 https://amzn.to/39rSNBH - Stepper Motor Driver A4988 https://amzn.to/2SIMGTJ - 8mm linear motion shaft https://amzn.to/39ufXrd - T8 8mm ACME lead screw https://amzn.to/2QBCiur - GT2 timing pulley 20T https://amzn.to/35fUXRu - GT2 timing belt Original parts/material may not available, above list may list generic parts. The entire printer was designed using Google Sketchup. The mounts are custom made from plexiglass/acrylic plastic, milled by my CNC machine (my other DIY project - CarbonCNC). Stepper motors, shafts, are from old printer/scanner, or you can buy those from ebay or amazon. My controller is a Sanguinololu (Sanguino + Pololu Step Driver)... Giving credit to the person who built the first Open Source 3D Printer Controller for the RepRap Project. Zach Hoeken Smith, who started the first beefy arduino called Sanguino - the first open source 3D Printer Controller, the real owner of thingiverse, the real brainchild of Markerbot, Read about RepRap project history to know more about how the first open source 3d Printer got started back in 2006. https://amzn.to/39y1k62