Production tracking for makers

Your prints don't fail.
Your tracking does.

You know roughly what you've built. But which plate had that shoulder piece? Did the chest armor complete or warp? Was that batch the 0.2mm or 0.15mm run? Loggrid turns “I think it's done” into I know it's done.

The pattern is always the same.

40 parts. 12 plates. 6 print files. You know most of it from memory — until plate 3 of a 6-plate batch fails and you're not sure which parts were even on it. You open the slicer. Check the folder. Scroll through Discord. And you still can't say for certain what's printed, what's pending, and what needs a rerun.

It's not a discipline problem. It's a tooling problem. Your to-do app doesn't understand plates. Your spreadsheet doesn't know which printer is running. Loggrid does.

How it works

Every layer of your production, tracked.

Work Items

Every part has a name, material, and status. Chest plate. PLA. Printed. No more guessing which pieces are still outstanding.

Print Files & Plates

One 3mf export = one print file. Inside it, each plate is one printer run. Loggrid maps exactly which parts live on which plate.

Resources

Your printers are first-class. See what's running, what's idle, what failed mid-run. Assign plates directly to machines.

Queues

A live board of what's printing, what's next, and what's blocked. Drag to reorder. Resolve failures without losing context.

Built around 3D printing.
Works for anything with parts, batches, and machines.

Laser cutters, CNC mills, resin casting, PCB assembly — if your workflow has parts that go through machines in batches, Loggrid fits. The concepts are the same: work items, runs, resources, and a way to know what's done.

Most teams start with 3D printing and expand from there.

Frequently asked questions

What is Loggrid?
Loggrid is a production tracking tool for 3D printing. It lets you track work items, print files, plates, and post-processing jobs so you always know what has been printed, what is pending, and what failed.
Is Loggrid free?
Yes. Loggrid is free to use. No credit card is required to create an account.
What is a plate in Loggrid?
A plate represents one printer run — a single build plate loaded into a printer. Loggrid maps which parts from a print file live on which plate, so you can tick off plates as they complete and know exactly what printed.
Can I use Loggrid for things other than 3D printing?
Yes. Loggrid works for any workflow involving parts going through machines in batches — laser cutters, CNC mills, resin casting, or PCB assembly.

Stop guessing. Start knowing.

Free to start. No credit card. Takes about two minutes to set up your first project.

Get started for free