Yáll just ain't seen my ex mother inlaw sit on a hood or fender now have ya.. he wouldn't need heat or any of that stuff... Just sit her really big fat @ss on that press and done..
WOW!!! I’m the co-owner and designer of Salvinos J R Models and I thoroughly appreciate every step in your designing, and am completely blown away by dies and the metal body! BRAVO sir!
This is amazing. I’m now imagining how it would bring a new dimension to RC rock crawling vs a more durable custom piece, or worse, a vaccuformed shell that can be cheaply replaced. You’d drive this thing like a really car because it has real risk of damage, and clearly took a ton of work to make (although, damaged panels could be replaced so it’s not a case of never wanting to risk using it) also, scratches, dings and dents will add a whole new level of story to the truck as it ages, something that previously had to be simulated during the build process.
Only channel I can relax and love to watch. Why because there’s no commentary, no stupid music, no slide and no text on screen. Just video with background noise
Simply stunning cad and 3D printing work, not mention the flawless cutting the panels out. Not to mention the flawless assembly. This is what You Tube is meant for. I am humbled by your skills!
He probably has a scrap bin with many dented or deformed parts and 10 hours of blooper reel. These videos usually take weeks or months. There's a channel I believe that does videos and always has a clock in the background. Usually like hours in-between clips.
I have always wanted to build two cars, out of aluminum foil, in great detail like this and slam them into each other. There is beauty in destruction. It is the used car look in Star Wars, where the ships always look dirty, scratched up and dented. I have used aluminum foil to make seabox cargo container models. They are easier to modify than the styrene HO scale ones, that double as a plug to make the metal ones. I did this when I was designing a cargo container house design for a client. It is an absolute joy to watch this video. Nobody running there neck, telling you the obvious as they build their model. No goofy flute music from their nephew. Just a master model builder and the sounds that he makes as he get lost in another world of his own. Great Video. You Sir are my hero.
When he said CRUSHABLE, i really thought that he's gonna crush the body in satisfaction at the end of the video haha. I really want to see it not gonna lie.
such a great video, the cuts were nearly seamless, and the level of detail is amazing, and no music is appreciated, looking forward to the next video, thank you
@@zahirmamdani the thing is not everyone has a nice ambient sound like this guy , everyone would just love to upload thr work as it is bit there's just so much background noise like people talking and other shit everytime I record something
Wow, 100% replica down to the very last detail! Even made from plastic and foil just like the real thing! I'm a ram owner, I joke. But seriously, this is a very cool idea. I have a 3D printer and a CNC mill, and this idea of mold/stamp making never occurred to me. Thank you for the idea seed...
The quantity of innapropriate, unsolicited, unwarranted and unrelated comments to content that some people make will never stop surprising me. Respect others and worry about your own life. Bravo for your skills and thank you for posting your craft.
Having been a toolmaker for normal size cars body skin panels and others, and spent many years within the industry, I am fully impressed on your or model making method and tool making knowledge. I have never seen this before on this scale.
Mate the world needs to see your talent, skill and imagination. Collectors around the world would pay very good money. Handmade bespoke RC or static models. Because they are handmade every model will be slightly different, adding to it's uniqueness. You are gifted, you could be very wealthy. Quite incredible. Kind Regards
Thought about this many times in my life, as a car nut. I can't wait until someone dares to build a fully functional scale model. Maybe with 3d printing getting so good, we'll see it soon enough
Imagine such toy cars one can get bends and scratches onto... It falls from what feels like 100 feet - it crumbles a bit. A young boy's and a 30 years old man's dream toy. It must be so fun when a small car behaves like the big one. Maybe I'm just too childish...
This is 1000x better than I was expecting. I thought this was going to be like those aluminum foil cars that I used to play with when I was a kid. I don't know if anyone remembers those Stomper monster truck derby kits where you can make your own aluminum foil cars to have your Stompers drive over them? I know it's way back in the day, but nothing beats Stompers, I wish someone would bring them back. I really miss those.
When I read crushable I thought this was some kind of rc car that would suffer realistic damage. Not sure why I jumped to that conclusion but I think it would be cool. Edit. after watching, if those panels were damaged I’d be heartbroken. Truly stunning work sir.
I literally seen a guy at a body shop take a Ford door skin and tear it like paper in his hands to remove the door badge. Then he showed me how the fenders were glued on the truck. I was blown away. Talk about polishing a turd !!
This is not just amazing art, it’s great ASMR. It’s also super cool because he has those molds, so if and when a panel becomes damaged, it easy to replace.
I've been toying with a similar project using cast resin press moulds but found it challenging. Your project is superb. When I saw those press moulds my jaw hit the floor. Hats off to you. You've got skills 👏👏👏👏
Having done tons of body work on real cars, I can get an idea of how much effort really went into this model truck. This little model is amazing! I've fought with body fitment for days if not weeks at a time on simple body parts like a fender or a hood. It is not as simple as just replace body panel paint and done. No there is a ton of work that goes into alignment and fit. For him to not only fit together what is accentually an entire truck (although miniature) but to have also hand made all the panels is amazing. Good work now I want to see you make other models...
I could be wrong but I work with stainless steel foil a lot and that’s what this seems like. More specifically it’s called tool wrap, it’s a foil used for heat treating to prevent oxidation because aluminum foil would melt.
@@tristanphillips8937 That would be a good idea. But i can't use stainless steel because i want my car body to rust a bit. But there is also something like steel foil But only company's can buy that stuf here in the Netherlands. So i have to wait until i have started my own business.
@@maxboonkittypoison yeah I mean I’d bet you can get it to rust though with some weak acid, when I heat it up it gets a really thick layer of black oxide. Just saying no steel (well very very few) is truly stain-PROOF just stain-LESS.
@@maxboonkittypoison so yes I’m 99% sure it would work for what you’re doing from what I know. Just use some really salty water in a spray bottle and keep an eye on it.
I think this technique might be interesting using multiple layers of a thinner foil laminated with some type of light adhesive just prior to pressing. The complex shapes may take with less force and greater detail without manual effort.
I use Reynolds Wrap Heavy Duty. It’s a little thicker than he regular foil, but, easier to handle after forming. This is a great video thank you for posting and sharing this vlog with us.
Im blow away with the level of detail incredibly a amazing job. From a hobbyist for models to rc and from design engineer to structural engineer, there is a market for you. A bravo 👏 and well done
Nice work, it's surprising that a c-clamp was enough for that. Grab yourself a woodworking vise so you can put even pressure over the entire mold/die, it might reduce the need to bone in those details. If you make some of the sharper areas a little deeper and taller than they need to be, it's possible to eliminate detailing after the press...especially if you use a harder wood for your mold like oak or walnut rather than pine plywood. For such small pieces, I bet just using a thick enough piece of rubber with a steel press plate behind it would give you exact forming down to the last detail, might need to upgrade your c-clamps to a small hydraulic press though.
Great vlog thanks for posting and sharing with us. Great info for the modelers. Detroit used to do this back in the sixties to sell cars. Old saying, win on Sunday sell on Monday.
Amazing work but one thing I am confused about, it is a Ram 1500 from the front but the bed looks like a 3500 dually bed with how wide it is/ how far the wheel wells stick out. Is this just from having to scale it down?
You sir have a keen eye for detail. Great work! I know how hard and how many hours that must have taken. I would have definitely tested the crushabilities trying to get those details. Props man.
That looks amazing! My only criticism would be the internal parts either could have used a little light sanding or printed at a finer resolution But apart from that it looks incredible.
My dad's brother built this amazing deck for his house when I was a kid. The detail was stunning. The design was perfect. My dad's comment was "Pretty nice. Why didn't you paint the nails?"
As a kid in the 70’s I always wanted a way to create a crushable body for my slot cars. That way when I crashed it was more realistic. Not exactly the same, but close. Very cool. I know it was a lot of work and it turned out awesome.
As a kid in the 60s, my cousin and I did have metal bodied slot cars...in HO scale. I handmade them from two layers of aluminum foil, using some of the original plastic bodies from the slot cars, as well as Matchbox or Hot Wheels cars...if the wheelbases were close to that of the HO chassis. The bodies were one piece, and I cut the windows out with curved cuticle scissors. We had a LOT of demo derbies, and if the body was being made with that use in mind...the hood and trunk sides would be sliced, along with most of the end that opened...leaving a small place in the middle, intact. This simulated the trunk and hood latches, and made for some realistic wrecks. Over the years, I must have made a few hundred of them. There were no interiors, of course...so once I got the hang of it, several could be made in an hour. I used first-aid tape...rolled up, with the sticky side out, to attach the door area of the body, to the chassis. So, the door crashes were limited in their realism. Stock cars have a roll cage, that include door bracing...so it wasn't much of a concern for them. Sure had gangs of fun with them. This is the first time, I've seen something similar, to what we had. Although, our detail was nowhere near to what went into making this truck.
I could be wrong but I work with stainless steel foil a lot and that’s what this seems like. More specifically it’s called tool wrap, it’s a foil used for heat treating to prevent oxidation because aluminum foil would melt
Good question, I was curious about that too.. [My mind also jumped straight to stainless steel foils]] Stainless Steel foils usually range from like 0.002mm to 0.15 'Soft annealed' being the most pliable Thinner would be nice for the extremely detailed panels [More cosmetic and never/rarely touched after shaped] Thicker would be nice for the larger 'structural' panels.. [Floor pan, main body, hood, roof, doors, bed, etc] It'd be cool to use this method to fab a firetruck.. then paint it, and get crazy accenting the exterior with gold leaf.
@@DirtyDovi yeah, stuff gets expensive though so I wouldn’t get every size. It does work harden and even the thin stuff is really thick. Be careful though if it’s too thin it very easily will tear if you try to stretch it too far
Knew a guy that did one in 1/10th scale for a custom RC body. Although, he just used a Tamiya clodbuster body and shaped the foil around it. Your fancy machine molds are awesome..
Tell me you’re an engineer without telling me you’re an engineer lol. That is awesome, brings back my little kid. I had some 1/64th scale hot wheels and matchboxes I took the bodies off of, and formed a double layer of aluminum foil to the bodies and would put them back on the chassis and crash them and repeat lol
Tesla is replcating die casting based technology for real cars using a tech called Gigapress. Revolutionizes car making and reduce parts count significantly. It cuts down manufacturing costs and increases production output. Also improves rigidity and longevity. When this man is moving from diecasting to sheet press the real manufacturing is moving the other way. But intricate and fine craftsmanship on display here! Congrats.
Truly amazing what a person can make when they are single.
😭
Ask Issac Newton. Man was a virgin when he died. What mark will you leave? TH-cam comments?
It is nice to be happy.
After every Newton comes one Einstein
can agree. ex gf got angry with me because i spent two hours at my workshop making chase rails for my ford f150...
He literally replicated the car manufacturing process on a smaller scale.
Amazing job! Im really impressed
Same problems, only recent years cars made from aluminium as large impressions would buckle or split.
Nope, thats the real dodge plant. They just hire people with really big hands. ;)
@@LogicalNiko YEP!!!----THAT'S WHY THE U.S.P.S. HAS THOSE BIG TRACTOR TRAILERS;----TO DELIVER THER PAY-CHEQUES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Yáll just ain't seen my ex mother inlaw sit on a hood or fender now have ya.. he wouldn't need heat or any of that stuff... Just sit her really big fat @ss on that press and done..
WOW!!! I’m the co-owner and designer of Salvinos J R Models and I thoroughly appreciate every step in your designing, and am completely blown away by dies and the metal body! BRAVO sir!
Don't sell yourselves short. We love what you're doing as well! Thanks for bringing generations of American racers to the modelers' bench.
No annoying music and not a word spoken, a perfect video.
This is amazing. I’m now imagining how it would bring a new dimension to RC rock crawling vs a more durable custom piece, or worse, a vaccuformed shell that can be cheaply replaced. You’d drive this thing like a really car because it has real risk of damage, and clearly took a ton of work to make (although, damaged panels could be replaced so it’s not a case of never wanting to risk using it) also, scratches, dings and dents will add a whole new level of story to the truck as it ages, something that previously had to be simulated during the build process.
Agree all the dings and dents will give it even more character as well
imagine he rolls it over on some little rock then has to take it back home to his miniature Paintless Dent Repair/miniature body shop guy
@@penguiin12 Bet that would be a sight to behold.I'm sure he spent hours at the computer just in the design.Yes done some incredible builds.
would be super cool on drift rc's
I agree!
Only channel I can relax and love to watch. Why because there’s no commentary, no stupid music, no slide and no text on screen. Just video with background noise
It never ceases to amaze me, the skill and talent some people have. Fantastic model, well done you.
Simply stunning cad and 3D printing work, not mention the flawless cutting the panels out. Not to mention the flawless assembly. This is what You Tube is meant for. I am humbled by your skills!
Im sure he edited all his mistakes out lol
He probably has a scrap bin with many dented or deformed parts and 10 hours of blooper reel. These videos usually take weeks or months. There's a channel I believe that does videos and always has a clock in the background. Usually like hours in-between clips.
I have always wanted to build two cars, out of aluminum foil, in great detail like this and slam them into each other. There is beauty in destruction. It is the used car look in Star Wars, where the ships always look dirty, scratched up and dented. I have used aluminum foil to make seabox cargo container models. They are easier to modify than the styrene HO scale ones, that double as a plug to make the metal ones. I did this when I was designing a cargo container house design for a client.
It is an absolute joy to watch this video. Nobody running there neck, telling you the obvious as they build their model. No goofy flute music from their nephew. Just a master model builder and the sounds that he makes as he get lost in another world of his own. Great Video.
You Sir are my hero.
When he said CRUSHABLE, i really thought that he's gonna crush the body in satisfaction at the end of the video haha. I really want to see it not gonna lie.
Me too 🙃
Great minds think alike
Some people just wanna watch the world burn huh?
DAMNIT!!! I shouldn't have read the comments! That's what I expected would happen. Well no reason to finish the vid now 🤣😂
Ikr I was like maybe 😆 🤣
such a great video, the cuts were nearly seamless, and the level of detail is amazing, and no music is appreciated, looking forward to the next video, thank you
True. Beautiful detail in work without music. The sounds of work is the best music
@@zahirmamdani the thing is not everyone has a nice ambient sound like this guy , everyone would just love to upload thr work as it is bit there's just so much background noise like people talking and other shit everytime I record something
I think that you'd find an arbor press to be extremely handy for that kind of work. Great build, and a fantastic video!
This is so much work, can’t imagine how hard it must have been… keep raising the bar 💪🏻
This is impressive. I make molds for this exact purpose for a living. Its neat seeing it done on a home scale.
Can I have a link to the website if yall sell these molds? Or even the finished cars? Because I really want one :D
@@nicki8731 no, like real full sized cars.
Wow, 100% replica down to the very last detail! Even made from plastic and foil just like the real thing! I'm a ram owner, I joke. But seriously, this is a very cool idea. I have a 3D printer and a CNC mill, and this idea of mold/stamp making never occurred to me. Thank you for the idea seed...
This is the most beautiful and bespoked model I've seen, a true work of art done with dedication and great craftsmanship
Seriously dude. Your scale modeling is way over the top. Don't ever stop. Hats off to you.
The amount of work for a 15 min video is insane. Working in the auto industry, that’s amazing.
I watched this guy a long time ago and I finally found this channel again trust when I say he makes some pretty damn good stuff and nice ram
The quantity of innapropriate, unsolicited, unwarranted and unrelated comments to content that some people make will never stop surprising me. Respect others and worry about your own life. Bravo for your skills and thank you for posting your craft.
Beautiful work, I find these videos relaxing, satisfying, and inspiring! Thank you for sharing!
Having been a toolmaker for normal size cars body skin panels and others, and spent many years within the industry, I am fully impressed on your or model making method and tool making knowledge. I have never seen this before on this scale.
Imagine having one of these for your rc rock crawler, that would be awesome.
Beautiful job, a reasonable sized RAM.
Man these are impressive. You have my respect for the time and effort you have put into these and the quality.
That model is absolutely *gorgeous*. Hats off to you, sir.
Mate the world needs to see your talent, skill and imagination. Collectors around the world would pay very good money. Handmade bespoke RC or static models. Because they are handmade every model will be slightly different, adding to it's uniqueness. You are gifted, you could be very wealthy. Quite incredible. Kind Regards
I'm speechless....this is amazing. The attention to detail is superb!
amazing! I've often thought of or dreamt of this kind of thing my whole life... you can't imagine how exciting it is to see it being done...
Thats exactly my reaction too. I've dreamt of doing this kinda thing my whole life
CLEARLY!!---THE MOST FUN YOU CAN HAVE WITH YOUR CLOTHES ON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thought about this many times in my life, as a car nut. I can't wait until someone dares to build a fully functional scale model. Maybe with 3d printing getting so good, we'll see it soon enough
Imagine such toy cars one can get bends and scratches onto... It falls from what feels like 100 feet - it crumbles a bit. A young boy's and a 30 years old man's dream toy. It must be so fun when a small car behaves like the big one. Maybe I'm just too childish...
@@fatitankeris6327 nope not childish... not at all
This is 1000x better than I was expecting. I thought this was going to be like those aluminum foil cars that I used to play with when I was a kid. I don't know if anyone remembers those Stomper monster truck derby kits where you can make your own aluminum foil cars to have your Stompers drive over them? I know it's way back in the day, but nothing beats Stompers, I wish someone would bring them back. I really miss those.
This is the best 15 minutes on all of the internet can't wait to see the update
1500 front end with a 3500 rear, love it, great work, amazing skills
You are a freaking artist!
Now you i would class as a model MAKER not just an assembler. Truly impressive!
When I read crushable I thought this was some kind of rc car that would suffer realistic damage. Not sure why I jumped to that conclusion but I think it would be cool.
Edit. after watching, if those panels were damaged I’d be heartbroken. Truly stunning work sir.
I too thought I came across crash test science. I would make 2, and crash one for the views. But I'm not a youtuber
Crushing handmade panels would be crazy, but if these were mass produced and cheap it opens up some really interesting possibilities.
I dreamed of doing this as a kid. You actually went ahead and did it :D
The 3d modelling is itself a challenge...not to mention the remaiining work. Amazing. I am really impressed. Very, very good job dude.
Wow! This is model building on a completely different level. Must be many, many hundreds of hours spent on making this. Very impressive.
WOW, just Wow. The time it took to just make the molds. Stunning work!
That’s about how thin and bendable my actual RAM is. You lean on it, it’s got a new shape.
thats like any newer vehicle
Thinner body = higher reserve of weight = thicker stronger frame
Dude my dads Chevy is the same way honestly I think this guy is using thicker material lol
I literally seen a guy at a body shop take a Ford door skin and tear it like paper in his hands to remove the door badge. Then he showed me how the fenders were glued on the truck. I was blown away. Talk about polishing a turd !!
And to think the new ones are actually a lot heavier than the 90s and '00s models.... All those useless features add up, I guess, lol.
Crushable doesn't mean it must crush. Anyway this is the most astonishing build I have ever seen. Wonderful!
It’s almost ceremonial, absolutely amazing work!
Amazing work here. Maybe the real car manufacturers need to watch this video and build the cars this good.
Fantastic modelling using aluminium sheet and pressing the parts out like they are dine in a factory
This is not just amazing art, it’s great ASMR. It’s also super cool because he has those molds, so if and when a panel becomes damaged, it easy to replace.
I've been toying with a similar project using cast resin press moulds but found it challenging. Your project is superb. When I saw those press moulds my jaw hit the floor. Hats off to you. You've got skills 👏👏👏👏
Having done tons of body work on real cars, I can get an idea of how much effort really went into this model truck. This little model is amazing! I've fought with body fitment for days if not weeks at a time on simple body parts like a fender or a hood. It is not as simple as just replace body panel paint and done. No there is a ton of work that goes into alignment and fit. For him to not only fit together what is accentually an entire truck (although miniature) but to have also hand made all the panels is amazing. Good work now I want to see you make other models...
Insane amount of detail. Blows my mind. I'm working on a disign for a steel body 1:10 scale rc car. But it is really hard building from scratch.
I could be wrong but I work with stainless steel foil a lot and that’s what this seems like. More specifically it’s called tool wrap, it’s a foil used for heat treating to prevent oxidation because aluminum foil would melt.
@@tristanphillips8937 That would be a good idea. But i can't use stainless steel because i want my car body to rust a bit. But there is also something like steel foil But only company's can buy that stuf here in the Netherlands. So i have to wait until i have started my own business.
@@maxboonkittypoison yeah I mean I’d bet you can get it to rust though with some weak acid, when I heat it up it gets a really thick layer of black oxide. Just saying no steel (well very very few) is truly stain-PROOF just stain-LESS.
@@maxboonkittypoison so yes I’m 99% sure it would work for what you’re doing from what I know. Just use some really salty water in a spray bottle and keep an eye on it.
The details on this is just mind boggling.
O boy,.. this is getting waaaay to good,. !!
I totally agree!
This guy is the reason we CAN have nice things
Красавчик с прямыми руками) молодец, видосы твои прям завораживают😁👍
The attention to detail is magnificent.
Holy cow he used actual steel, I thought it was aluminum foil the whole time until I saw the magnets at the end!
Could just be tin… it’s thicker and magnetic vs foil… tin is a little more malleable
Well this is a whole new level. Blows me away.
I think this technique might be interesting using multiple layers of a thinner foil laminated with some type of light adhesive just prior to pressing. The complex shapes may take with less force and greater detail without manual effort.
I use Reynolds Wrap Heavy Duty. It’s a little thicker than he regular foil, but, easier to handle after forming. This is a great video thank you for posting and sharing this vlog with us.
Amazing work of art but please tell me there's more video of this truck!
Im blow away with the level of detail incredibly a amazing job. From a hobbyist for models to rc and from design engineer to structural engineer, there is a market for you. A bravo 👏 and well done
Nice work, it's surprising that a c-clamp was enough for that. Grab yourself a woodworking vise so you can put even pressure over the entire mold/die, it might reduce the need to bone in those details. If you make some of the sharper areas a little deeper and taller than they need to be, it's possible to eliminate detailing after the press...especially if you use a harder wood for your mold like oak or walnut rather than pine plywood. For such small pieces, I bet just using a thick enough piece of rubber with a steel press plate behind it would give you exact forming down to the last detail, might need to upgrade your c-clamps to a small hydraulic press though.
Or just a bottle jack. Lever vise. Proofing press from lithography. Many ways to squeeze things.
This man is definitely an engineer..., very clever
Матрицы, пуансоны, 3д-печать, "ловкость рук и никакого мошенства". Так просто и понятно выглядит, но так сложно и нереально взять и сделать так же.
English bro!
Insane.
Absolutely insane.
And magnificent.
Congratulations, sir.
I would love to see a 1/12 scale version of this
Your on a whole different level of skill, pure craftsmanship👍👍
Can you do a 1967 Volkswagen Karmann Ghia afterwards? It’ll be interesting since the body is one whole piece. Btw I love watching your videos!! 👍
A 67 bug would be cool to
Great vlog thanks for posting and sharing with us. Great info for the modelers. Detroit used to do this back in the sixties to sell cars. Old saying, win on Sunday sell on Monday.
ждем продолжения с колесами и двигателем!
Ngl, that's much more impressive than I thought it would be
Amazing work but one thing I am confused about, it is a Ram 1500 from the front but the bed looks like a 3500 dually bed with how wide it is/ how far the wheel wells stick out. Is this just from having to scale it down?
Incredible craftsmanship. Well done.
I’m pretty sure Chrysler uses the same gage metal on their fuel size cars too. 😁
Very beautiful work and very generous of you to share your Blend files and working methods!
You sir have a keen eye for detail. Great work! I know how hard and how many hours that must have taken. I would have definitely tested the crushabilities trying to get those details. Props man.
You sir are out of control. Absolutely EPIC. I love this more than you know.
Virtually Speechless. Keep up the amazing work. - CHEERS
That looks amazing!
My only criticism would be the internal parts either could have used a little light sanding or printed at a finer resolution But apart from that it looks incredible.
My dad's brother built this amazing deck for his house when I was a kid. The detail was stunning. The design was perfect. My dad's comment was "Pretty nice. Why didn't you paint the nails?"
@@jondrew55 should he have painted the nails?
My response would have been: "only girls paint their nails dad" ;)
@@chanceym6000 Oh, sharp ! 👏👏
how brilliant is this guy. I'm blown away. if I had this talent I would do 1/8 scale muscle cars.
Чётко, красота... MEGA NICE 👀
That's awesome.
Reminds me of the RC crawler and demolition derby cars that Metal Masher makes
That is damn impressive, pun intended. 😉
As a kid in the 70’s I always wanted a way to create a crushable body for my slot cars. That way when I crashed it was more realistic. Not exactly the same, but close. Very cool. I know it was a lot of work and it turned out awesome.
As a kid in the 60s, my cousin and I did have metal bodied slot cars...in HO scale. I handmade them from two layers of aluminum foil, using some of the original plastic bodies from the slot cars, as well as Matchbox or Hot Wheels cars...if the wheelbases were close to that of the HO chassis. The bodies were one piece, and I cut the windows out with curved cuticle scissors. We had a LOT of demo derbies, and if the body was being made with that use in mind...the hood and trunk sides would be sliced, along with most of the end that opened...leaving a small place in the middle, intact. This simulated the trunk and hood latches, and made for some realistic wrecks. Over the years, I must have made a few hundred of them. There were no interiors, of course...so once I got the hang of it, several could be made in an hour. I used first-aid tape...rolled up, with the sticky side out, to attach the door area of the body, to the chassis. So, the door crashes were limited in their realism. Stock cars have a roll cage, that include door bracing...so it wasn't much of a concern for them. Sure had gangs of fun with them. This is the first time, I've seen something similar, to what we had. Although, our detail was nowhere near to what went into making this truck.
Great work as always. I was just thinking that I hope that we'd see a new video from you soon. What thickness metal sheet did you use?
I could be wrong but I work with stainless steel foil a lot and that’s what this seems like. More specifically it’s called tool wrap, it’s a foil used for heat treating to prevent oxidation because aluminum foil would melt
Good question, I was curious about that too..
[My mind also jumped straight to stainless steel foils]]
Stainless Steel foils usually range from like 0.002mm to 0.15
'Soft annealed' being the most pliable
Thinner would be nice for the extremely detailed panels
[More cosmetic and never/rarely touched after shaped]
Thicker would be nice for the larger 'structural' panels..
[Floor pan, main body, hood, roof, doors, bed, etc]
It'd be cool to use this method to fab a firetruck.. then paint it,
and get crazy accenting the exterior with gold leaf.
@@DirtyDovi yeah, stuff gets expensive though so I wouldn’t get every size. It does work harden and even the thin stuff is really thick. Be careful though if it’s too thin it very easily will tear if you try to stretch it too far
Amazing craftsmanship sir..that must feel very satisfying for you!!!was for us viewers 🇦🇺
Is the 3d model also made by you or is it available somewhere online to buy? Fantastic job as usual. Real kudos.
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That was bloody amazing! I was almost expecting to see you whip out a super-mini pinch weld machine for the assembly.
So much more patience then I will ever have, looks really awesome
You are amazing! I want to build a 1:10 stamped aluminum body for my R/C Jeep! You are such a inspiration!!
Knew a guy that did one in 1/10th scale for a custom RC body. Although, he just used a Tamiya clodbuster body and shaped the foil around it. Your fancy machine molds are awesome..
Now this is modeling taken to the next level!
This is built better than most cars today.
That was immensely satisfying to watch and listen to. Thank you. Now the childhood monster inside me is visualising a slo mo crash impact 👺
You Sir are a madman. That is insane. My applause.
This is absolutely amazing you are incredibly talented
Tell me you’re an engineer without telling me you’re an engineer lol. That is awesome, brings back my little kid. I had some 1/64th scale hot wheels and matchboxes I took the bodies off of, and formed a double layer of aluminum foil to the bodies and would put them back on the chassis and crash them and repeat lol
Tesla is replcating die casting based technology for real cars using a tech called Gigapress. Revolutionizes car making and reduce parts count significantly. It cuts down manufacturing costs and increases production output. Also improves rigidity and longevity.
When this man is moving from diecasting to sheet press the real manufacturing is moving the other way. But intricate and fine craftsmanship on display here! Congrats.
What a dream. RC Drift would be amazing to watch with actual damage. Make one remote controlled!
I’ve always dreamed of this as a kid. Well done sir.
Love the attention to the fine little details! You hand painted details I can't even see clearly! Very nice art!
What a great build!
Congratulations!
Clearly a skilled engineer.