Thanks again to Harry’s! Click here harrys.com/morley to redeem your Trial Set for just $5! Let me know what color razor handle you got in the comments below
..this is actually my first time using someone's referral link during a promotion I didn't skip. Dude, thank you. I was looking for a service like this for a quite a while now. And I get an awesome video on the side. Subbed!
We just bought a cabin cruiser. Already saw some flaws that will be in need of some 3d design and printing work. Walkthrough windshield endstopper when opened, swimladder tpu u block to keep it from going out. Now held by a strapper. And pretty sure more will follow. 3d printers are very usefull.
really though thats a pretty easy situation for the program to resolve. it should just fillet the outer egde further, then the upper fillet should be extended down so that it meets the lower/outer fillet surface. essentially what it would do if he did them in the opposite order. Rather than just not working at all, it should bring up a warning, with maybe some options for how to handle the collision.
@@ge2719 yeah I mean their whole fillet thing is broken still, even besides just that feature not being present. I've had fillets not just fail but like completely destroy the part geometry if applied and have also gotten bits of geometry where I'm hesitant a fillet will work but it works fantastic so idk it's mostly just luck.
The 1st one he printed was too short yall... the bulb has a twist lock socket to remove the socket and bulb from the lense. The lense came glued to begin with. What are all yall talking about right now😂
@@ssavman they prob never owned cars with self serviceable parts. Cars these days are like phones if you break the cover for the head light sorry you are gonna have to replace both because the makers only make them in pairs now + you have to send it back to the factory for service otherwise it will void your warranty.
Just an idea - some spray lacquer may have improved the transparency to better match the original. Not sure if UV degradation is an issue for the part you printed, but some lacquers also include UV protection. Great quick job you did there though!
Nice job. Only thing I'd do different is use some clear rtv silicone to attach instead of ca glue. Might be difficult to change the bulb now if it ever goes out.
Not many people realize that CA glue is water soluble. Eventually the glue will fail - hopefully at the time a bulb change is needed. Silicone sounds like a better adhesive to me as well.
3d prints that become part of your life forever are the best. I've had a bunch of opportunities to make some like that, and it's really fulfilling knowing you're using this thing you created every single day.
Hi, nice video, one thing you could try for transparent plastic is to increase the extrusion factor by 25% it makes it more transparent since there is less gaps between layers and perimeters… Also I had a laugh seing you calculate the factor for matching the part to the actual size, just under where you were entering the factor you had the option to enter it in millimeters ! Thank you.
9:00 - when scaling something in the slicer, you can just change the measurement in millimetres using the box below which saves you having to work out the percentage increase/decrease. This just save s a bit of time if you know how much bigger/smaller you want to make it.
You should check out compound joint pliers. They multiply your grip input, super nice for support material removal. I got a needle nose pliers to try it out, ended up getting side cutters and normal pliers too. Cons: bigger, less jaw opening per hand input, not cheap(but what good tools are?) I love your iterative workflow
Look good for under 1 hour! Coming from the hobby industry the chrome plated plastic parts often need to have the chrome removed (sander/scraped) for better adhesion, especially with CA glue.
I got into 3D printing because I couldn't get parts to fix my older side by side. I use FreeCad though, so the frustration factor is somewhat higher for the software. You can generally get a much clearer product with PETG if you print hotter and slower, but the supports will be harder to remove and stringing is more of an issue. Also, removing the cover on the other side to see how the original lens locked into place and building that into your print if possible would have made changing the bulb should it become necessary less of an issue than you'll have with the glued on lens cover. Well made video, and I'm jealous of your printer.
I recently learned to give your support material a 0.2mm gap above it or so, and you have almost no problem pulling the supports off, as well as basically no problems in the print. it's super awesome
And in Germany you would now go to jail (not really, but it's quite f'd up) because of an illegal part on your car without identification and type approval markings. Or like we say "erlöschen der Betriebserlaubnis" (expiring of operating licence - the federal approval paperwork which makes it legal to drive is void)
Classic Morley video right here. The ol "need to fix something with 3D printing" It is one of your early videos like this that finally pushed me to buy a printer! I would love to see you do short videos on how to use need to know Fusion functions because that halted my momentum since I couldn't quite get where I wanted. I used Tinker cad but it is limited and makes your prints blocky.
5:50 the fillet cant go any further because otherwise it will try to curve down a surface that is being used as a startin poing for another fillet. i think in this case you could have done the fillets int he opposie order, the outer one first, then the inner one the fillet would have met with the already filleted surface. but in general fillets and bevels stop working because it cant physically go any larger and be able to perform the change. or at least not in a way where it knows what you want it to do exactly, so you would often have to cut up sections of the object and add bevels and fillets in the way you want them to go.
im an auto tech for 38 years and im going to get into 3d printing soon. Gonna buy an x1c hopefully in a month or 2 . I love building things and getting into some basic cad design is my main interest. Thanks for video !
I 3d printed lenses for the side marker light on my 71 dodge dart and was able to put my logo imbedded in the lenses so it shows when lit up. Very cool stuff.
It would of taken more than 42 minutes to call and searching around a junkyard for a light cover .... And it was like a dollar worth of filament. Leaving the house vs not leaving the house. I think he made the right choice.
this is such a good video. I needed a headlight dust cap for my vw golf. However they wanted 20 dollars for a dust cap so i found one on thingyverse, printed it and it still works! its been 2 years!
It would be great if fusion adjusted the parameters of the fillet to avoid a failure, or was just a little more robust in dealing with complex geometries.
Hahaha yeah I was like wtf... You haven't tested it yet but then it worked so yeah... To be fair I haven't printed with that filament yet so I don't know what it's like.
9:11 no need to calculate a factor... just add the mm's in the X axis. as for getting clear as possible, print on glass with the exterior part touching the plate... it will give a glass finish. You may just want to change the dome to a more flat surface in order to take advantage of a glass hotbed finish . Great designing skills.
Have you tried using PLA for the support material for PETG? The two different materials don't bond very well, so removing supports would be easier. Also works in reverse if your part is in PLA.
Since it would be illegal to use a non tested cover on the car here (legal reasons) i would have visited a junkyard i guess. I think an hour is hard to best, but i might habe done it, too. Great work 😁👍
Hey! Deano here from Napa Valley, CA USA. I Love the very subtle ( not!!) segway into the Harry's commercial endorsement. LOL It caught me completely off guard (not!!) I absolutely love your videos. I am starting from your latest posted and binge watching. Keep them coming. I would also like to see more kitty and doggie shots!!
Always love to see real 3D printing rapid prototyping applications. Definitely recommend updating your model rather than using a slicing software to scale a model, your modeling software holds tighter tolerances and sometimes scaling your part can affect it in different ways depending the geometry. But quick enough changes get ya by sometimes.
Great Video and Love the idea of being able to print your own part for your car. Not sure why you stopped the timer for the printer however. It is something thats part of the whole deal and still very impressive, time doesn't stop for printing , that's all I'm saying.
I do the EXACT same thing with Filets. When it won’t work on a normal number then I start going by tenths. 😀 At least I’m not the only one! And you’ve future proofed a replacement for the opposite side. 😂
I love your knowledge and passion. I found your video wanting to know if a 3D printer could reproduce interior plastic parts for a 1988 Dodge Ramcharger. Pieces would be anywhere from 18-24" approximately. Impossible to find for the most part, but there are many Dodge truck lovers who want to restore their cracked interior panels. Great work!
I don't know what would happen, if you ask a 3d printer owners to print together a car chassis in parts - and build a complete car out of different plastics. Maybe open source microcar would be pretty interesting to see how fast can be a car printed.
Not only waiting a month, also paying a lot of money to get a simple blinker light module. So this is not just "win win"it is "win win win" and feeling like a boss
Also there is this one magical ancient secret technique that our modern 3d scanning photo-op brains keep forgetting called PEN AND PAPER. You'd need to make a hole for the bulb, but you could get the exact outline drawn out just by placing a piece of paper against the blinker and lightly brushing the edge with the pen. Then lay the paper flat with a ruler and just trace the outline in CAD.
'Transparent' PETG will never be clear as glass or injection-moulded plastic, but there are a few tricks: *Printing* - wider nozzle, thicker layers, going as hot as the filament can handle, and 'ironing' every layer (I think Superslicer supports this, not sure about other software) *Post-processing* - sanding/polishing, epoxy resin clearcoat, and/or _careful_ heat treatment with a regular heat gun. Chemical smoothing in a solvent bath is technically an option but PETG needs pretty gnarly chemicals for that so I wouldn't recommend it.
Amazing video, I wouldn't do it in my climate where the car body can reach easily 80c in summer if not more, do you have any recommendation for material than can survive upto lets say 140c just to be safe
Great job on the quick fix. I think it would be cool if you remove the entire housing from the "good side" and 3d model that one so you have a matching set
Great functional project! Just to comment on the slicer scaling: I'm fairly certain you can just add 4mm to the X value instead of having to scale it in %? Concidering the value was in a text box just beneath the scale percentage? :)
Great job. It's very useful to have a 3D printer and knowing how to design in Fusion 360. Making the mistake of printing out the other side, you straight answered my question if left and right are the same. You saved yourself a lot of time (waiting) and probably also money. You did not count the printing time, why not? In most countries cars have to go for a technical inspection every year or every two years. Sometimes the people at the inspection are real nit-pickers and they will not allow a 3D-printed part. But if that is not a problem in your town, you can offer the light-covers for sale. Do you know, why the original one fell off? Has it been helped by somebody? How does CA-glue hold in strong frost and/or when the sun is burning on it all day?
Hey Morley I noticed you using Instant Bond CA glue. I am currently using a different brand called Mitre Bond but noticed the other day that the brand you`re using is significantly less expensive. Does it work pretty good? Considering switching. This video is great. This is the sort of thing i would get a 3D printer to do, over the usual figures and knick knacks that some folks go for.. Gotta say though, i`m not keep on the likely learning curve involved with learning to use Fusion 360. Great video. Thanks for sharing. Happy Easter to you and yours.
2:52 I find it interesting how you shaved, not that its bad or anything, but i just had a realization that many people probably shave alot different then i. I dont normally watch people shave but it was there haha. You shave from one side to the other, when i do, i section it off. Cheeks first, then under my chin, then the side burns, then the mustache area, then the under lips area, and finally the chin. Then i go back over one more time if i missed anything lol.
I don't know how the wheather is in your country, but here in Italy sun and high temperatures will melt 3d printed parts for sure. It doesnt' look like a long-term solution to me. Anyway, you did a nice job!
I think warming the part up and letting it conform to the curve of the mating piece could have been a good idea rather than having the glue fight stresses in the plastic as it tries to straighten.
Thanks again to Harry’s! Click here harrys.com/morley to redeem your Trial Set for just $5! Let me know what color razor handle you got in the comments below
order some polysmooth and reprint this it should look great
..this is actually my first time using someone's referral link during a promotion I didn't skip. Dude, thank you. I was looking for a service like this for a quite a while now. And I get an awesome video on the side. Subbed!
We just bought a cabin cruiser. Already saw some flaws that will be in need of some 3d design and printing work. Walkthrough windshield endstopper when opened, swimladder tpu u block to keep it from going out. Now held by a strapper. And pretty sure more will follow. 3d printers are very usefull.
5:37 It's not failing for no reason, it's failing because the fillet would intersect with the bulb extrusion causing interfering features.
Thats the same thing I was thinking when he said that
really though thats a pretty easy situation for the program to resolve. it should just fillet the outer egde further, then the upper fillet should be extended down so that it meets the lower/outer fillet surface. essentially what it would do if he did them in the opposite order. Rather than just not working at all, it should bring up a warning, with maybe some options for how to handle the collision.
I was thinking the same thing
@@ge2719 yeah I mean their whole fillet thing is broken still, even besides just that feature not being present. I've had fillets not just fail but like completely destroy the part geometry if applied and have also gotten bits of geometry where I'm hesitant a fillet will work but it works fantastic so idk it's mostly just luck.
You should put the first one you printed on the other side so they match!
He's gluing a cover over a bulb that's going to burn out
@@chrisnelson1935 I would have replaced that old bulb with a new LED one that will probably outlast the entire car.
The 1st one he printed was too short yall... the bulb has a twist lock socket to remove the socket and bulb from the lense. The lense came glued to begin with. What are all yall talking about right now😂
@@ssavman people that have never changed a bulb on their car
@@ssavman they prob never owned cars with self serviceable parts. Cars these days are like phones if you break the cover for the head light sorry you are gonna have to replace both because the makers only make them in pairs now + you have to send it back to the factory for service otherwise it will void your warranty.
below the percentage when scaling in Bambu Studio there's a box with absolute scale in mm where you could've just added the 4mm 😂
I precisely thought, "Why doesn't he just use the field with the measurement!?" 🤣
Just an idea - some spray lacquer may have improved the transparency to better match the original. Not sure if UV degradation is an issue for the part you printed, but some lacquers also include UV protection. Great quick job you did there though!
You can print it again XD You don't need to waste time waiting for an spare.
Nice job. Only thing I'd do different is use some clear rtv silicone to attach instead of ca glue. Might be difficult to change the bulb now if it ever goes out.
thinking the same thing
Not many people realize that CA glue is water soluble. Eventually the glue will fail - hopefully at the time a bulb change is needed. Silicone sounds like a better adhesive to me as well.
Since you've got the X1C with AMS, try using PLA as a support material for PETG and it will come away without any prying at all
I love your vibe man. Failing with a smile is something we should all learn to do! Keep these up!
I'm in the car industry in Ontario and 2-4 weeks is not uncommon... keep up the awesome work! Always a fun watch.
3d prints that become part of your life forever are the best. I've had a bunch of opportunities to make some like that, and it's really fulfilling knowing you're using this thing you created every single day.
Hi, nice video, one thing you could try for transparent plastic is to increase the extrusion factor by 25% it makes it more transparent since there is less gaps between layers and perimeters… Also I had a laugh seing you calculate the factor for matching the part to the actual size, just under where you were entering the factor you had the option to enter it in millimeters ! Thank you.
9:00 - when scaling something in the slicer, you can just change the measurement in millimetres using the box below which saves you having to work out the percentage increase/decrease. This just save s a bit of time if you know how much bigger/smaller you want to make it.
This is my favorite use for my 3D printer. I've fixed all sorts of things around the house. It's so satisfying. Nice work.
You should check out compound joint pliers. They multiply your grip input, super nice for support material removal. I got a needle nose pliers to try it out, ended up getting side cutters and normal pliers too. Cons: bigger, less jaw opening per hand input, not cheap(but what good tools are?)
I love your iterative workflow
Look good for under 1 hour! Coming from the hobby industry the chrome plated plastic parts often need to have the chrome removed (sander/scraped) for better adhesion, especially with CA glue.
I got into 3D printing because I couldn't get parts to fix my older side by side. I use FreeCad though, so the frustration factor is somewhat higher for the software. You can generally get a much clearer product with PETG if you print hotter and slower, but the supports will be harder to remove and stringing is more of an issue. Also, removing the cover on the other side to see how the original lens locked into place and building that into your print if possible would have made changing the bulb should it become necessary less of an issue than you'll have with the glued on lens cover. Well made video, and I'm jealous of your printer.
You always make us smile. You are so engaging and personal You make us want to try things; BTW love the hair....and the glasses.
I recently learned to give your support material a 0.2mm gap above it or so, and you have almost no problem pulling the supports off, as well as basically no problems in the print. it's super awesome
Good call in the 3d printing, i think it came out great and you saved a lot of time and money too
And in Germany you would now go to jail (not really, but it's quite f'd up) because of an illegal part on your car without identification and type approval markings.
Or like we say "erlöschen der Betriebserlaubnis" (expiring of operating licence - the federal approval paperwork which makes it legal to drive is void)
The infamous TÜV approval.
If someone notices at all and cares enough to report him
Classic Morley video right here. The ol "need to fix something with 3D printing" It is one of your early videos like this that finally pushed me to buy a printer! I would love to see you do short videos on how to use need to know Fusion functions because that halted my momentum since I couldn't quite get where I wanted. I used Tinker cad but it is limited and makes your prints blocky.
Check out “Learn fusion 360 in 30 days” by product design online on TH-cam! That’s how I learned 99% of my fusion knowledge
5:50 the fillet cant go any further because otherwise it will try to curve down a surface that is being used as a startin poing for another fillet. i think in this case you could have done the fillets int he opposie order, the outer one first, then the inner one the fillet would have met with the already filleted surface.
but in general fillets and bevels stop working because it cant physically go any larger and be able to perform the change. or at least not in a way where it knows what you want it to do exactly, so you would often have to cut up sections of the object and add bevels and fillets in the way you want them to go.
im an auto tech for 38 years and im going to get into 3d printing soon. Gonna buy an x1c hopefully in a month or 2 . I love building things and getting into some basic cad design is my main interest. Thanks for video !
Brilliant video again, Morley! And I loved that ad segue! Really well done.
Morley, you my friend, have the skills!! Congrats
love the videos and the creativity you have always entertaining to watch Thanks Morley
I 3d printed lenses for the side marker light on my 71 dodge dart and was able to put my logo imbedded in the lenses so it shows when lit up. Very cool stuff.
You da man👍 your ingenuity is impressive my friend. Keep creating 🙏
Always good to see your 3D printing videos ! And all the others to be fair!
Might have been a bit better to call a scrapyard instead of trying to source one directly from Hyundai...
Reminded me very much of the 3d printed sandals. Well intended but perhaps not the best choice of subject given the solutions available out there.
He's not the sharpest tool in the shed.
Wow you guys missed the whole point of the video.
Whoosh
It would of taken more than 42 minutes to call and searching around a junkyard for a light cover .... And it was like a dollar worth of filament. Leaving the house vs not leaving the house. I think he made the right choice.
this is such a good video. I needed a headlight dust cap for my vw golf. However they wanted 20 dollars for a dust cap so i found one on thingyverse, printed it and it still works! its been 2 years!
Love it. Now grow that beard back and do another one with Hairrys - eh, Harry's 😃
Good Video Morley, and happy printing!
The fillet did not fail for no reason. you have a spline section which caused a invalid geometry once then 4mm fillet is applied.
It would be great if fusion adjusted the parameters of the fillet to avoid a failure, or was just a little more robust in dealing with complex geometries.
I'm blown away! I hope that the bulb doesn't burn out any time soon!
Did you really glue it on, before you tested if the bulb is bright enough to shine through?
Great video, I want more 3D printing stuff!
Hahaha yeah I was like wtf... You haven't tested it yet but then it worked so yeah... To be fair I haven't printed with that filament yet so I don't know what it's like.
Thanks Mom! Great Video!
9:11 no need to calculate a factor... just add the mm's in the X axis.
as for getting clear as possible, print on glass with the exterior part touching the plate... it will give a glass finish.
You may just want to change the dome to a more flat surface in order to take advantage of a glass hotbed finish .
Great designing skills.
Have you tried using PLA for the support material for PETG? The two different materials don't bond very well, so removing supports would be easier. Also works in reverse if your part is in PLA.
Since it would be illegal to use a non tested cover on the car here (legal reasons) i would have visited a junkyard i guess. I think an hour is hard to best, but i might habe done it, too. Great work 😁👍
8:09 - priceless moment. Been there a few times and hated myself :D
Hey! Deano here from Napa Valley, CA USA. I Love the very subtle ( not!!) segway into the Harry's commercial endorsement. LOL It caught me completely off guard (not!!) I absolutely love your videos. I am starting from your latest posted and binge watching. Keep them coming. I would also like to see more kitty and doggie shots!!
Always love to see real 3D printing rapid prototyping applications. Definitely recommend updating your model rather than using a slicing software to scale a model, your modeling software holds tighter tolerances and sometimes scaling your part can affect it in different ways depending the geometry. But quick enough changes get ya by sometimes.
That bulb itself looked like it had seen better days.. Might be an idea to replace it to get it to blink orange, or at least top up the blinker fluid.
Great Video and Love the idea of being able to print your own part for your car. Not sure why you stopped the timer for the printer however. It is something thats part of the whole deal and still very impressive, time doesn't stop for printing , that's all I'm saying.
Really enjoy seeing a Morley Kert video
I do the EXACT same thing with Filets. When it won’t work on a normal number then I start going by tenths. 😀
At least I’m not the only one!
And you’ve future proofed a replacement for the opposite side. 😂
when Loki start to 3d print by himself stuffs for self- repair other stuffs!
good job ;)
Paint a few layers of varnish like Polycrylic on that and I bet it goes total transparent.
I love your knowledge and passion. I found your video wanting to know if a 3D printer could reproduce interior plastic parts for a 1988 Dodge Ramcharger. Pieces would be anywhere from 18-24" approximately. Impossible to find for the most part, but there are many Dodge truck lovers who want to restore their cracked interior panels. Great work!
I don't know what would happen, if you ask a 3d printer owners to print together a car chassis in parts - and build a complete car out of different plastics. Maybe open source microcar would be pretty interesting to see how fast can be a car printed.
as someone who actually works in the car industry, there's about a million regulations this would fail
love the typewriter intro!
Thumbs up, although with the CA glue, good luck changing the bulb now.- probably should have changed the bulb before
Love the work man keep it going🎉❤
Super cool, congratulations!
Not only waiting a month, also paying a lot of money to get a simple blinker light module. So this is not just "win win"it is "win win win" and feeling like a boss
Great video and segue into commercial. : ) I love these videos showing the practicality of a 3D printer. Mahalo for sharing! : )
I love you, Morley. Thank you for the content while I eat my spaghetti and meatball.
@8:00 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 so frustrating when you get blindsided by a basic oversight
I love that you are 3-D printing useful things for your car, but I personally would’ve just gone to a junkyard instead.
Well done! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
just print it up side down. The fillets should give enough area too built off of if you have appropriate cooling
Manufacturers need to begin making 3D models more available. I know Printables recently announced a partner program.
Well done man. We are in the same city and hope to cross paths one day. Your personality (optimism and can do -anything) is a great one. Keep it up!
Love these types of videos 👍
3d printing saves the Day!!!
Good luck changing that bulb!
with the beard = okay, pretty cool guy. Without = Total Nerd!🤣🤣Just teasing, don't cry.
8:50 why the mental gymanstics with measuring, calculating etc when you can literally see the length in the scaling popup and can add 4mm to 145.53mm?
I think the point of the video is that 3D printing is viable to make useful things rather than just fidget toys. Thanks for the video!
Cool! Thanks for the video
You go, girl.
I was thinking of also using the 3d printed piece as a mold for a vacuum forming piece.
Love this idea !
Such an incredible video ❤❤❤❤
Also there is this one magical ancient secret technique that our modern 3d scanning photo-op brains keep forgetting called PEN AND PAPER. You'd need to make a hole for the bulb, but you could get the exact outline drawn out just by placing a piece of paper against the blinker and lightly brushing the edge with the pen. Then lay the paper flat with a ruler and just trace the outline in CAD.
I bet the speed of the X1C helps lots when doing your community ad-hoc repair videos
Thats fantastic! Would it be possible to make it completely transparent like the original one?
'Transparent' PETG will never be clear as glass or injection-moulded plastic, but there are a few tricks:
*Printing* - wider nozzle, thicker layers, going as hot as the filament can handle, and 'ironing' every layer (I think Superslicer supports this, not sure about other software)
*Post-processing* - sanding/polishing, epoxy resin clearcoat, and/or _careful_ heat treatment with a regular heat gun. Chemical smoothing in a solvent bath is technically an option but PETG needs pretty gnarly chemicals for that so I wouldn't recommend it.
Its alright if you have autodesk and you also know how to 3d design. Im limited with tinkercad because I dont have a clue.
I would have removed the other side and either 3d scanned or flatbed scanner it. Then print both sides mirrored so they match.
Amazing video, I wouldn't do it in my climate where the car body can reach easily 80c in summer if not more, do you have any recommendation for material than can survive upto lets say 140c just to be safe
OMG, how many times have i done something mirrored (or unmirrored?)? The feelz.
Haha it happens to the best of us!
Great job on the quick fix. I think it would be cool if you remove the entire housing from the "good side" and 3d model that one so you have a matching set
You’re amazing man
Great functional project!
Just to comment on the slicer scaling:
I'm fairly certain you can just add 4mm to the X value instead of having to scale it in %?
Concidering the value was in a text box just beneath the scale percentage? :)
Great job. It's very useful to have a 3D printer and knowing how to design in Fusion 360.
Making the mistake of printing out the other side, you straight answered my question if left and right are the same. You saved yourself a lot of time (waiting) and probably also money. You did not count the printing time, why not? In most countries cars have to go for a technical inspection every year or every two years. Sometimes the people at the inspection are real nit-pickers and they will not allow a 3D-printed part. But if that is not a problem in your town, you can offer the light-covers for sale.
Do you know, why the original one fell off? Has it been helped by somebody? How does CA-glue hold in strong frost and/or when the sun is burning on it all day?
love 3d print
Hey Morley I noticed you using Instant Bond CA glue. I am currently using a different brand called Mitre Bond but noticed the other day that the brand you`re using is significantly less expensive. Does it work pretty good? Considering switching.
This video is great. This is the sort of thing i would get a 3D printer to do, over the usual figures and knick knacks that some folks go for.. Gotta say though, i`m not keep on the likely learning curve involved with learning to use Fusion 360. Great video. Thanks for sharing. Happy Easter to you and yours.
Thanks! Honestly, it's the only brand of CA glue/activator that I've used. I can't recommend it over any other brand.
Great video man!
2:52 I find it interesting how you shaved, not that its bad or anything, but i just had a realization that many people probably shave alot different then i. I dont normally watch people shave but it was there haha. You shave from one side to the other, when i do, i section it off. Cheeks first, then under my chin, then the side burns, then the mustache area, then the under lips area, and finally the chin. Then i go back over one more time if i missed anything lol.
Now what about replacing the bulb? Should have gotten a new one there while at it, still, really nice info, getting a 3D printer for my car mods
I don't know how the wheather is in your country, but here in Italy sun and high temperatures will melt 3d printed parts for sure. It doesnt' look like a long-term solution to me.
Anyway, you did a nice job!
Awesome - love this 😁😁
I really like those fusion360 document-your-work style videos :)
Also, did you switch to metric? Awesome, no more ridiculous fractions lol
I think you said mm twice.i was thinking am I being stupid Morley knows what he's doing, right 👍
I think warming the part up and letting it conform to the curve of the mating piece could have been a good idea rather than having the glue fight stresses in the plastic as it tries to straighten.
You are great 😂 lovya
Sweet job!
Don't have any truly clear 3D filament?
Would it be possible to print it completely transparent using the "print the glass" project on printables?
Excellent! What was the adhesive you used - I tried listening to what you said several times and couldn't quite catch it.
D'oh! It's in the description!
First rule of engineering: Once all else has failed, read the instructions. 😏