I would say that it's a natural selection - but things are MUCH worse. Those dummies who are not smart enough to read manuals and use safety gear making higher pressure on economy. They are sick more often and require expensive treatment. So they hey not only dumb and harmful for themselves but the whole society.
Yes, and the best part is that you don't have to wear a gas mask at all with a 3 day beard. Because the sealing line is completely useless. Eve full beard is a bit better.... it's btw... no bashing or so.
The second method using the Alclad metal lacquer paints can be improved by using the chrome paint again instead of the gold, you add a little yellow and a small amount of red food colouring gel to it, it produces a highly reflective gold paint. A prop maker on YT documented this method when he was painting medals and showed how it holds up on his wearable C3PO costume. His name is Gordon Tarpley, he has useful tips on technique too.
Don't even need to mix the colour into the Alclad. Just use Alclad Chrome as normal, and then spray with clear Acrylic yellow or orange paint over the top to get a shiny gold. Use a range of different clear colours to get a whole host of metallic and candy finishes. Yellow or orange on their own aren't quite right for a true gold, but Tamiya Clear Yellow mixed with just one or two drops of Tamiya Clear Orange can be spot on.
You could always mix a little bit of Alcad copper with the gold. I've had good luck mixing silver and chrome to make a good "base" for space kits. (It's also great to use gunmetal and white aluminum to do a zenithal for Cybermen)
This is pretty incredible for RF filters/antennas! In radio frequency design the full conductor can be replaced by a thin copper sufrace due to the skin effect. This means you can 3D print most (very expensive and often custom) RF components now!
There are many layers to the techniques in your second method for getting a mirror finish. When done right it'll reflect like a mirror. A big contributor is the black paint that's used. It has to be very thin otherwise you'll end up with a bumpy surface. Proper sanding and polishing before is also important, and you can use automotive polishing compound to get that mirror finish after sanding. It's not that important if you're electroplating, but for many of us being able to have metal like finishes with paint alone is definitely achievable through paint with some practice.
Great video! While you used a black base- layer for both colors in the medium phase, If you used a red base-coat for the gold one, it would read as much more "golden"
Thank you so much for showing us you using gloves, and respirators. The amount of channels that either don't or don't themselves take safety measures is WAY to high.
Another important reminder for working with resin prints, the actual resin dust is pretty horrifically bad for you too. I suggest a mask and ideally a vacuum cleaner turned on with the nozzle near to the print to just suck up the dust as it's made. (Ideally it'd have a hepa filter too)
Honestly,. the minimal effort resin one is the most screen-accurate, as the commbadges have a more satin finish than plated. Not to mention, that's pretty much exactly how they were done for the show, too.
You’re a life saver when it comes to tutorials, from helmets to weapons, to small props. I’m currently making a Batman costume for Halloween and electroplating, couldn’t have done it without you!
Final electroplate result looks absolutely amazing. Even the airbrush resin one looks great. Can't wait to start soon, perhaps I'll get myself an electroplating kit for Christmas!
@@jothain Europe is actually really good for electroplating. Look for the Tifoo brand. They seem to be a LOT cheaper than in the US or Australia and they work well. I think @hen3drick uses a lot of Tifoo stuff. In Aus we basically have Caswell which is STUPIDLY expensive, or a bunch of cheap no-name knock-offs which may or may not be any good.
Have you considered trying Electroforming? Basically the same as Electroplating except you plate onto a silicone mold that has conductive paint applied and are left with a copper shell that you can electroplate onto. It's yet another step and requires a bit more copper but I think its kind of neat to be left with an entirely metal part in the end.
Try metallic lacquer some time! You spray a coat of gloss black and a coat of silver/gold, buff it with cotton, and finish it with a layer of clear. It takes a couple hours from start to finish and you can buy it in rattle cans or airbrush-ready.
Looks great. You should try high gloss spray paint then graphite powder and the finish with clear yellow paint. That's what I used for my Mandalorian. Super mirror reflective without the electroplating.
For painting with either aerosol or airbrush, your base coat matters a lot. Rather than black, a brown or dark red may help (I've even seen some that use a pink basecoat). Alternately, try a test piece, and add brown or a dark red to darken the colour a bit and make it warmer.
For the low effort method, you could add a step of using self-leveling primer. Not sure it will be enough to fill very rough layer-lines, but it should give a better result with not much more effort.
ELECTRO POLISHING - and one thing, though. Resin prints can be polished to a mirror finish as-is. They'll look like a piece of acrylic then. Would be interesting to see the second method on such parts.
7:11 electro polishing Electropolishing is an electrochemical process used to polish, passivate, and deburr metal parts. During this process, the metal part is submerged in an electrolyte solution and connected as the anode (positive electrode), while a cathode (negative electrode) is also submerged in the same solution. When an electric current is applied, metal ions are removed from the surface of the part, smoothing and polishing it. The process can refine surfaces at the microscopic level, remove burrs, and improve the corrosion resistance of the metal. Commonly electropolished metals include stainless steel, aluminum, and nickel alloys.
Awesome video. As always. If I ever get out of apartment living I will try this method out. For now. I can just enjoy this these master classes. Thank you!
very impressed with how good these came out, especially the fdm ones! I've seen one or two people use a similar process to intentionally rust parts to give them a weathered metal look but there seems to be very little info on it out there. I'd love a demo showing the best ways of doing this!
Fantastic results. I've had some fun experimenting with copper sulphate but no serious project yet. I have discovered that dropping rusty nuts and bolts in solution and leaving for a few hour gets underneath the corrosion and basically removes if. The very slight copper layer is then easily removed using a wire brush. A little of topic I know. Thanks for the great video.
so true. also the colors were quite matching the original prop. The electroplated is more of a "hero prop" as it's what I personally had crafted for the show.
Your com badges are beautiful . Two lesser known things about them: on the show, they're painted with a rattle an and they're not gold, they're painted brass Nevertheless, excellent work!
It's fun to think that those badges are small enough to fit the entire pcb of an earpod clone including the tiny microphone chip. So all that would have to be done would be linking touching the badge with the pcb's touch component to trigger a voice assistant.
Thanks for explaining the grits that you use when sanding each layer of filler, primer, etc. I had to find out a method that worked for me through lots of trial and error, but it would be nice to get a more in-depth video explaining your process to get glass-smooth prints (including names of each product used at each stage, grits used at each stage, buffing compounds & their grits, etc... whether you sand with 1000+ grit between paint layers, etc, etc). For example, this is my process (which may be overkill... or their may be better ways to do it... which is why I think sharing your way could be helpful too): _My process (quite light sanding pressure, so you dont scratch things too much):_ 1) 220 grit sanding to take off any zits / sharp edges and knock layer lines down a tiny bit 2) Single coat of Primer spray paint 3) A couple coats of Motip Spray Putty to fill the layer lines. 4) 400 grit sandpaper to smooth it out. If you can still see / feel layer lines with your nail, then go back to step 3. 5) Spray with Filler Primer, then sand smoother with 600 grit 6) Spray with Primer, then sand with 800 grit 7) Spray base color coat, sand with 1000-1500 grit between coats (dont sand last color coat) 8) Spray a few coats of clearcoat 9) Switch to buffing/polishing wheel (sponge pads on my drill)... using buffing compounds 1000, then 2500, then 3800 This will get you a smooth mirror-like surface... like the surface of a show sports car... but you can stop at lower grits of sanding and ignore the buffing compound with buffing wheels/pads if you dont want that level of insane smoothness / shine. Most times, you can stop at 400 grit and not need to go higher because you wont need that smooth a surface.... but any higher grits than 400 will generally need to be wet-sanded to avoid clogging of sandpaper.
Haha dein Versprecher sehr sympathisch ich kann nicht einmal 2 Prozent so cool Englisch sprechen aber verstehen klappt super bei dir sehr klare Aussprache 👍👌danke dafür und für die guten Infos
when painting with metalic paints both spray and air brushing, put a black gloss base layer, let it dry for at least 24h and than the metalic paints, youll get amazing results.
I love your the electroplating process, especially as former jeweler who learned to do this in school for plating metals and did it a lot on the market. After seing your result with 3D printed props, I am now scared of scammers comming in with a new twist on the fake gold jewelry trick.
Awesome video! You are the master of electrating 3d printed parts. ;-) BTW ... usually best smooth results should be achieved using wet sand paper (ger: Nass-Schleifpapier). Wet sand paper is used before car is getting painted. You should change from dry to wet sand paper. The result will be so much better.
I accidentally shorted two copper wires next to a plastic bit of plumbing and to my surprise it became nicely copper coated on the exposed side of the plastic, is there a more refined way of doing this plasma coating on plastic?
Absolutely amazing results with the electroplating, your videos have inspired me to try electroplating my resin prints, Ive started the pokeball😊 would be brilliant if you could do a more in depth tutorial on the electroplating itself, there seems to be loads of contrary advice on the interweb😮
3:22 for gold metallic paint it tends to look better over a red base coat instead of black. Although my experience and where I lernean it from is for miniature painting so might not apply the same to large models
With airbrushing, I would try different basecoats to get more of a silver/gold color - use white/yellow underneath instead of black, or spray everything silver and put gold on top of the silver
There was an old trick on TH-cam where you would zinc plate then copper plate a quarter and use a torch to melt the metals to form brass. It looked awesome and will be basically corrosion resistant without being expensive like gold. But since idk if that would be too much heat for 3d printed parts, I would love to see it tested!!
Just a pro safety tip: Never wear gloves when using a polishing wheel. It may seem counterintuitive, but gloves can get caught up in the motor and rip your hands apart. This goes for any machine that has a motor, including; lathes, pillar drills, routing tables, etc.
If you're sanding down the resin prints, why not also sand down the fdm prints? You can get a much smoother surface on top if you choose ironing top surfaces in the slicer settings too
what i have come to use for sanding resign and FFF prints is abrasive mesh (in german Schleifgitter). They dont leave sand/graind behind and are easy to work with while submerged in water. what is also stronglish recommend in oder to avoid aerosol particals.
As the owner of a filament printer, I'm actually blown away at how smooth you were able to get the FDM prints in the second method. Which exact products do you use for this step (prior to airbrushing)? Oh, and I live in Germany, so can probably get the same ones you are using.
Have you tried vibratory finishing the parts using corn cob media after plating? I use a brass tumbler for plated metal on pinball machines. I don't have to polish this way. Very good results from this method. After tumbling just clean and add your nickel or gold segment.
@@hen3drik I also use crushed walnut shells. Depending on the plating you sometimes need a bit more coarseness. I get it from petco and its reptile bedding. Corn cob media I order online. I use Berry’s model 400 vibratory tumbler. It is small but there are a lot bigger ones depending on the need.
I get why people think the electroplated one looks best, but the airbrushed one looks a lot more screen accurate. Even in close-up shots of the combadge, you don't see reflections, they are all matte anyway. Yes, I understand this is a video on finishing 3D prints... but come on! Star Trek!
These are great and all but the first method with the resin print is more accurate to the original studio props and would he more desirable to those who aim for accuracy in the props and costumes. The electroplated versions are simply the idealized versions but are still way too shiny to be useful for cosplay because they will make the costume itself look cheap.
Do you have a video on how to make the rotary jig? I'm having trouble getting the aligator clip to not rotate with my rotary set up. Thanks in advance, your videos are awesome
Sorry, no, but I modified the original. Added an cable holder for the alligator clip. In the original design a thin wire was inserted into the jig that was wrapped around the big copper wire.
You really need to adjust your FDM printer. Your quality is atrocious, and it can be improved by a lot with a few tweaks such as slow it down if you don't want to play with all the other settings
Good Video, thank u!👌 Why don't you use wet sandpaper? The surfaces become much smoother Have you ever tried Molotow's Liquid Chrome? In my opinion, the best "chrome paint", but requires a lot of prework.
Yes you can but you have to use a special gold electrolyte to directly plate on stainless steel. The one I use for these cases is called „gold flash“ and it does the job quite well.
Appreciate the safety reminder. So many channels don’t show that they wear PPE while they work, making it easy for newbies to omit.
I would say that it's a natural selection - but things are MUCH worse. Those dummies who are not smart enough to read manuals and use safety gear making higher pressure on economy. They are sick more often and require expensive treatment. So they hey not only dumb and harmful for themselves but the whole society.
I think I may stick with FDM prints which have far less toxins, and are a lot more idiot resistant than resin.
Neeeeeeeeeeerds 🤣
@@TM-ro7lhshut up
Yes, and the best part is that you don't have to wear a gas mask at all with a 3 day beard. Because the sealing line is completely useless. Eve full beard is a bit better.... it's btw... no bashing or so.
The second method using the Alclad metal lacquer paints can be improved by using the chrome paint again instead of the gold, you add a little yellow and a small amount of red food colouring gel to it, it produces a highly reflective gold paint.
A prop maker on YT documented this method when he was painting medals and showed how it holds up on his wearable C3PO costume.
His name is Gordon Tarpley, he has useful tips on technique too.
Don't even need to mix the colour into the Alclad. Just use Alclad Chrome as normal, and then spray with clear Acrylic yellow or orange paint over the top to get a shiny gold. Use a range of different clear colours to get a whole host of metallic and candy finishes. Yellow or orange on their own aren't quite right for a true gold, but Tamiya Clear Yellow mixed with just one or two drops of Tamiya Clear Orange can be spot on.
Tamiya clears are so nice. I actually spray them as candy on my nickeled parts.
🤔 good tips! Thank you
You could always mix a little bit of Alcad copper with the gold. I've had good luck mixing silver and chrome to make a good "base" for space kits. (It's also great to use gunmetal and white aluminum to do a zenithal for Cybermen)
This is pretty incredible for RF filters/antennas! In radio frequency design the full conductor can be replaced by a thin copper sufrace due to the skin effect. This means you can 3D print most (very expensive and often custom) RF components now!
Thank you for leaving the outtakes in when talking about the chrome paint, as a fellow german I can relate "boah"
You‘re welcome 😅
Rein in die Futterluke!
wow, the sound after electroplating was so surprising!
There are many layers to the techniques in your second method for getting a mirror finish. When done right it'll reflect like a mirror. A big contributor is the black paint that's used. It has to be very thin otherwise you'll end up with a bumpy surface. Proper sanding and polishing before is also important, and you can use automotive polishing compound to get that mirror finish after sanding.
It's not that important if you're electroplating, but for many of us being able to have metal like finishes with paint alone is definitely achievable through paint with some practice.
Toothpaste
Great video! While you used a black base- layer for both colors in the medium phase, If you used a red base-coat for the gold one, it would read as much more "golden"
Thanks for the hint. I read this at least twice now. A lot of pros out there (I’m a paint noob) 😅
Thank you so much for showing us you using gloves, and respirators. The amount of channels that either don't or don't themselves take safety measures is WAY to high.
Another important reminder for working with resin prints, the actual resin dust is pretty horrifically bad for you too. I suggest a mask and ideally a vacuum cleaner turned on with the nozzle near to the print to just suck up the dust as it's made. (Ideally it'd have a hepa filter too)
Good point. Wearing a mask with particles + dust + A2 protection does the job for me.
Do you mean the dust from sanding? Good to know!
Honestly,. the minimal effort resin one is the most screen-accurate, as the commbadges have a more satin finish than plated. Not to mention, that's pretty much exactly how they were done for the show, too.
You‘re are absolutely right. I think I made more of a „dream-what-if-prop“. 😅
You’re a life saver when it comes to tutorials, from helmets to weapons, to small props. I’m currently making a Batman costume for Halloween and electroplating, couldn’t have done it without you!
Final electroplate result looks absolutely amazing. Even the airbrush resin one looks great. Can't wait to start soon, perhaps I'll get myself an electroplating kit for Christmas!
I got my first for Xmas, too 😅
I didn't know there are ready kits. Are there many suppliers in Europe?
Kit from where?
@@jothain Europe is actually really good for electroplating. Look for the Tifoo brand. They seem to be a LOT cheaper than in the US or Australia and they work well. I think @hen3drick uses a lot of Tifoo stuff. In Aus we basically have Caswell which is STUPIDLY expensive, or a bunch of cheap no-name knock-offs which may or may not be any good.
Have you considered trying Electroforming? Basically the same as Electroplating except you plate onto a silicone mold that has conductive paint applied and are left with a copper shell that you can electroplate onto. It's yet another step and requires a bit more copper but I think its kind of neat to be left with an entirely metal part in the end.
Try metallic lacquer some time! You spray a coat of gloss black and a coat of silver/gold, buff it with cotton, and finish it with a layer of clear. It takes a couple hours from start to finish and you can buy it in rattle cans or airbrush-ready.
Looks great. You should try high gloss spray paint then graphite powder and the finish with clear yellow paint. That's what I used for my Mandalorian. Super mirror reflective without the electroplating.
For painting with either aerosol or airbrush, your base coat matters a lot. Rather than black, a brown or dark red may help (I've even seen some that use a pink basecoat). Alternately, try a test piece, and add brown or a dark red to darken the colour a bit and make it warmer.
The final product looks great!
the clang of electroplated parts is music to my ears!
The resin prints looks so much better!
For the low effort method, you could add a step of using self-leveling primer. Not sure it will be enough to fill very rough layer-lines, but it should give a better result with not much more effort.
ELECTRO POLISHING - and one thing, though. Resin prints can be polished to a mirror finish as-is. They'll look like a piece of acrylic then. Would be interesting to see the second method on such parts.
7:11 electro polishing
Electropolishing is an electrochemical process used to polish, passivate, and deburr metal parts. During this process, the metal part is submerged in an electrolyte solution and connected as the anode (positive electrode), while a cathode (negative electrode) is also submerged in the same solution. When an electric current is applied, metal ions are removed from the surface of the part, smoothing and polishing it. The process can refine surfaces at the microscopic level, remove burrs, and improve the corrosion resistance of the metal. Commonly electropolished metals include stainless steel, aluminum, and nickel alloys.
So you put electroplating in reverse?
Thank you for all you do for hobbyists. I’m building a garage studio and you are the most informative source I’ve found!
Awesome video. As always. If I ever get out of apartment living I will try this method out. For now. I can just enjoy this these master classes. Thank you!
very impressed with how good these came out, especially the fdm ones! I've seen one or two people use a similar process to intentionally rust parts to give them a weathered metal look but there seems to be very little info on it out there. I'd love a demo showing the best ways of doing this!
Fantastic results. I've had some fun experimenting with copper sulphate but no serious project yet. I have discovered that dropping rusty nuts and bolts in solution and leaving for a few hour gets underneath the corrosion and basically removes if. The very slight copper layer is then easily removed using a wire brush. A little of topic I know. Thanks for the great video.
Thank you so much for this video! I never thought to use spray car filler to hide layer lines. Will be using these tips!
You can make an magnetron sputterer from a jar and a vacum pump.
You can plate almost everything with that
gold plated PLA, my mind is blown :: thanks for this awesome video!
Ironically, the first resin print was probably the most accurate as the screen used badges were dull to avoid reflections.
so true. also the colors were quite matching the original prop. The electroplated is more of a "hero prop" as it's what I personally had crafted for the show.
Your com badges are beautiful . Two lesser known things about them: on the show, they're painted with a rattle an and they're not gold, they're painted brass
Nevertheless, excellent work!
I was thinking that the result was too "bright" and that the originals were slightly more brassy.
they even sound metalic!!!!
It's fun to think that those badges are small enough to fit the entire pcb of an earpod clone including the tiny microphone chip. So all that would have to be done would be linking touching the badge with the pcb's touch component to trigger a voice assistant.
That electroplating is verry cool! :D
Thanks for explaining the grits that you use when sanding each layer of filler, primer, etc.
I had to find out a method that worked for me through lots of trial and error, but it would be nice to get a more in-depth video explaining your process to get glass-smooth prints (including names of each product used at each stage, grits used at each stage, buffing compounds & their grits, etc... whether you sand with 1000+ grit between paint layers, etc, etc).
For example, this is my process (which may be overkill... or their may be better ways to do it... which is why I think sharing your way could be helpful too):
_My process (quite light sanding pressure, so you dont scratch things too much):_
1) 220 grit sanding to take off any zits / sharp edges and knock layer lines down a tiny bit
2) Single coat of Primer spray paint
3) A couple coats of Motip Spray Putty to fill the layer lines.
4) 400 grit sandpaper to smooth it out. If you can still see / feel layer lines with your nail, then go back to step 3.
5) Spray with Filler Primer, then sand smoother with 600 grit
6) Spray with Primer, then sand with 800 grit
7) Spray base color coat, sand with 1000-1500 grit between coats (dont sand last color coat)
8) Spray a few coats of clearcoat
9) Switch to buffing/polishing wheel (sponge pads on my drill)... using buffing compounds 1000, then 2500, then 3800
This will get you a smooth mirror-like surface... like the surface of a show sports car... but you can stop at lower grits of sanding and ignore the buffing compound with buffing wheels/pads if you dont want that level of insane smoothness / shine.
Most times, you can stop at 400 grit and not need to go higher because you wont need that smooth a surface.... but any higher grits than 400 will generally need to be wet-sanded to avoid clogging of sandpaper.
Haha dein Versprecher sehr sympathisch ich kann nicht einmal 2 Prozent so cool Englisch sprechen aber verstehen klappt super bei dir sehr klare Aussprache 👍👌danke dafür und für die guten Infos
The airbrush ones looked really good
when painting with metalic paints both spray and air brushing, put a black gloss base layer, let it dry for at least 24h and than the metalic paints, youll get amazing results.
I love your the electroplating process, especially as former jeweler who learned to do this in school for plating metals and did it a lot on the market. After seing your result with 3D printed props, I am now scared of scammers comming in with a new twist on the fake gold jewelry trick.
Awesome video! You are the master of electrating 3d printed parts. ;-) BTW ... usually best smooth results should be achieved using wet sand paper (ger: Nass-Schleifpapier). Wet sand paper is used before car is getting painted. You should change from dry to wet sand paper. The result will be so much better.
Use self leveling high gloss paint
Super Überblick zu den Methoden. Echt tolle Ergebnisse!!
Danke für die Sicherheitshinweise.
Sehr gerne!
One of the best finishing videos out there thanks!
Your face and body protection is better than 99% of TH-camrs!
These videos are great. Thank you for the great content you're providing!
That was just cool. I've never gotten into electroplating for stuff like this. Only with nickle for electronic stuff.
This is so amazing!
It opens up possibilities 😅
Such an impressive process. I love the look and the sound of electroplating!
This is simply amazing!
wow, the last one looks amazing
Das ist so cool!! 😮😮😮 Sehr beeindruckend!!
Another great video! I look forward to every one!
yeah allclad paints! My father and I use them in our model paint jobs.
The middle and best are amazing, for cosplay the middle one is very acceptable. Thank you for a very interesting video
8:20 the electroplated looks so good I feel like I just learned a secret hack to make anything look perfectly chrome or gold
You actually did 😅
This is a good candidate for solvent smoothing.
My jaw is on the floor dude. 😲
Very nice
Endlich jemand der weiß das Resin Krebserregend ist und deswegen Maske/Handschuhe nutzt 🎉
I accidentally shorted two copper wires next to a plastic bit of plumbing and to my surprise it became nicely copper coated on the exposed side of the plastic, is there a more refined way of doing this plasma coating on plastic?
Absolutely amazing results with the electroplating, your videos have inspired me to try electroplating my resin prints, Ive started the pokeball😊 would be brilliant if you could do a more in depth tutorial on the electroplating itself, there seems to be loads of contrary advice on the interweb😮
Those are impressive results!
Vielen Dank für Ihre Video! Sie haben den besten Inhalt.
On fdm, I would print the center peace as a flat part on a smooth glass bed and bent it with the help of some heat to the main peace.
If you print something with a flat top (like this) and you enable ironing. You can get near-mirror results from metallic spray cans.
Unfortunately this doesn’t have a flat top.
_bites into it._
Gold!
3:22 for gold metallic paint it tends to look better over a red base coat instead of black. Although my experience and where I lernean it from is for miniature painting so might not apply the same to large models
and then someone comes along and produces awesome results using nail polish^^
Beautiful print and plate
My go-to gold paints are gaiacolor 132 pearl gold, and 122 Starbright gold
Great video. While I love the electroplated result, the airbrush seems to work really well too.
I just found your channel, it's WONDERFUL stuff!! and nice subliminal text on electropolishing! 🙂
With airbrushing, I would try different basecoats to get more of a silver/gold color - use white/yellow underneath instead of black, or spray everything silver and put gold on top of the silver
This is purely amazing 😍
8:06 i wasn't aware, thank you
FDM + Acetone fumes seems like it could fit between low and medium effort
The electroplated materials look fantastic. How difficult is it to avoid and/or remove the fine surface scratches on those samples?
c'est trés jolie j"aime beaucoup!
Viva Star Trek
There was an old trick on TH-cam where you would zinc plate then copper plate a quarter and use a torch to melt the metals to form brass. It looked awesome and will be basically corrosion resistant without being expensive like gold. But since idk if that would be too much heat for 3d printed parts, I would love to see it tested!!
Oh, it’s working like a charm. Will show some time. 😊
@@hen3drik awesome!!!!!!
Very cool!
Just a pro safety tip: Never wear gloves when using a polishing wheel. It may seem counterintuitive, but gloves can get caught up in the motor and rip your hands apart. This goes for any machine that has a motor, including; lathes, pillar drills, routing tables, etc.
Oh, you‘re so right. I never do this when drilling but yeah, thank you!
I want to build a custom grille for my car and these videos are incredibly useful to learn how to re-plate the plastic for a finished OEM look...
If you're sanding down the resin prints, why not also sand down the fdm prints? You can get a much smoother surface on top if you choose ironing top surfaces in the slicer settings too
what i have come to use for sanding resign and FFF prints is abrasive mesh (in german Schleifgitter). They dont leave sand/graind behind and are easy to work with while submerged in water. what is also stronglish recommend in oder to avoid aerosol particals.
That’s a good hint. I‘ll try these. Thanks!
Ich habe es probiert. Funktioniert wahnsinnig gut. Danke für den Tipp!
FDM looks just as good as resin if you do step 3.
As the owner of a filament printer, I'm actually blown away at how smooth you were able to get the FDM prints in the second method. Which exact products do you use for this step (prior to airbrushing)? Oh, and I live in Germany, so can probably get the same ones you are using.
hornbach: auto-k-basic-filler-haftgrund-grau-400-ml
@@hen3drik Danke!
it depends what part of the costume I would like to make the armor and premeditatedly allocate the main salaries from fdm waste
That's amazing!
Have you tried vibratory finishing the parts using corn cob media after plating? I use a brass tumbler for plated metal on pinball machines. I don't have to polish this way. Very good results from this method. After tumbling just clean and add your nickel or gold segment.
I will try that
@@hen3drik I also use crushed walnut shells. Depending on the plating you sometimes need a bit more coarseness. I get it from petco and its reptile bedding. Corn cob media I order online. I use Berry’s model 400 vibratory tumbler. It is small but there are a lot bigger ones depending on the need.
I get why people think the electroplated one looks best, but the airbrushed one looks a lot more screen accurate. Even in close-up shots of the combadge, you don't see reflections, they are all matte anyway.
Yes, I understand this is a video on finishing 3D prints... but come on! Star Trek!
That's beautiful. Now how do you fit the communications electronics inside?
mega gute videos. hat duschonmal darüber nachgedacht die videos auf deutsch zu machen
Danke
i think they have a FDM filament that can be smoothed out by alcohol so you don't have to sand as many layer lines?
OMG VOYAGER FAN!!!!!!!!
These are great and all but the first method with the resin print is more accurate to the original studio props and would he more desirable to those who aim for accuracy in the props and costumes. The electroplated versions are simply the idealized versions but are still way too shiny to be useful for cosplay because they will make the costume itself look cheap.
Do you have a video on how to make the rotary jig? I'm having trouble getting the aligator clip to not rotate with my rotary set up. Thanks in advance, your videos are awesome
Sorry, no, but I modified the original. Added an cable holder for the alligator clip. In the original design a thin wire was inserted into the jig that was wrapped around the big copper wire.
You really need to adjust your FDM printer. Your quality is atrocious, and it can be improved by a lot with a few tweaks such as slow it down if you don't want to play with all the other settings
This is awesome, I want to try it out on some chess pieces
You can also apply some clear orange on your gold.
Oh, I will try that!
Good Video, thank u!👌
Why don't you use wet sandpaper? The surfaces become much smoother
Have you ever tried Molotow's Liquid Chrome?
In my opinion, the best "chrome paint", but requires a lot of prework.
You could have achieved a better result on the FDM printer is you had used "Ironing" as this makes the top layer smooth.
I think raisin spray are good for most films, plating is for merchandise
Can I use stainless steel instead of nickel?
Yes you can but you have to use a special gold electrolyte to directly plate on stainless steel. The one I use for these cases is called „gold flash“ and it does the job quite well.