spacephrawg
Pebble Pounder
firstly, no i have not forgotten about the project to make a 1984-6 Toyota truck body for the SCX10. It is backburnered for the moment but it is something i very much want to do.
So, this thread: I came up with a silly random idea for making a strong metal roll bar for a scaler: have it 3d printed in stainless steel. They can do that now apparently, and for 10 bucks per cubic CM, in high detail. yeah the price is steep but I know for a fact that learning to braise steel together would cost more in the long run and besides I've tried welding and don't like it. Also I'm getting better at the 3d rendering thing. It wouldn't make much sense to do this for production, rather it would be for me.
What gave me the idea was that over on the LR thread the scale rigs general tech forum, there were a few D90's that had home-made roll cages which appealed to me. One of the reasons I don't like making something like that with my hands is I'm not good at symmetry and/or getting the measurements right, which is why I am attracted to designing it on the computer: precision and symmetry are easy in CAD programs.
I'm just trying to get a fix on how nuts this idea is or isn't.
I'd happily 3d print RC car bodies in ABS if it weren't for the fact that the technology isn't good enough yet to print ABS without stepping.
The two printing services that seem to have attracted the most press are Ponoko and Shapeways. Their rates are almost identical but Ponoko is located in the US and Shapeways is in the Netherlands. Meanwhile there are prototyping services in every major city here in the US as far as I know.
So just how nuts/extravagant is it to 3d print a roll cage? What do you think?
So, this thread: I came up with a silly random idea for making a strong metal roll bar for a scaler: have it 3d printed in stainless steel. They can do that now apparently, and for 10 bucks per cubic CM, in high detail. yeah the price is steep but I know for a fact that learning to braise steel together would cost more in the long run and besides I've tried welding and don't like it. Also I'm getting better at the 3d rendering thing. It wouldn't make much sense to do this for production, rather it would be for me.
What gave me the idea was that over on the LR thread the scale rigs general tech forum, there were a few D90's that had home-made roll cages which appealed to me. One of the reasons I don't like making something like that with my hands is I'm not good at symmetry and/or getting the measurements right, which is why I am attracted to designing it on the computer: precision and symmetry are easy in CAD programs.
I'm just trying to get a fix on how nuts this idea is or isn't.
I'd happily 3d print RC car bodies in ABS if it weren't for the fact that the technology isn't good enough yet to print ABS without stepping.
The two printing services that seem to have attracted the most press are Ponoko and Shapeways. Their rates are almost identical but Ponoko is located in the US and Shapeways is in the Netherlands. Meanwhile there are prototyping services in every major city here in the US as far as I know.
So just how nuts/extravagant is it to 3d print a roll cage? What do you think?