I’m building a home-use basketball rebounder and need a 3D model that I can print on my Creality machines. The finished unit should stand roughly 3–4 feet once assembled, so the parts will have to be split to fit a typical Creality build volume and then bolt, snap, or dovetail together cleanly. Scope and detail • Moderate detail is ideal—textures, mounting features, beveled edges, and a smart ball-return angle—without complex moving mechanisms. • Please model with PETG in mind: sensible wall thicknesses, fillets at stress points, and allowances for a bit of post-print flex. • A flat front face or grid that cushions impact yet directs the ball back toward the shooter is essential. Side wings or a subtle funnel shape would be a plus if you can keep it printable. Deliverables 1. Print-ready STL (or 3MF) files broken into Creality-sized sections. 2. The native CAD source (STEP, Fusion 360, or similar) so I can tweak dimensions later. 3. A brief assembly guide showing hardware or fasteners, recommended layer orientation, and slicer settings you used for PETG. Acceptance criteria • Parts slice error-free in Cura/PrusaSlicer at 0.2 mm layer height. • All joints align without sanding beyond normal print cleanup. • The assembled frame stands rigid and returns a regulation basketball from 8–10 ft throws without cracking after at least 50 rebounds. If you have experience designing sports gear or FEA-checking plastic parts, let me know—that insight will help dial in durability. I’m ready to start as soon as I see your approach and previous print-ready models.