I think Emily's is better in terms of being an actual benchy, not a different model. But in terms of being a boat, this guys is better. EDIT: not taking sides, they each have their strong points
@@real_e Emily just sized up a model... She put effort into assembly, but this guy actually made a functional boat, and I think most people would associate this boat with a benchy. Don't get me wrong I don't dislike Emily's video but this is way cooler and much more functional.
Oh, I think Emily would fully accept that this boat is functionally much better; as, she's all about the janky, she's the queen of the bodge, the matriarch of the kludge
“As a good engineer, I decided to do the math AFTER my design didn’t work”. Holy crap, soooo relate. You’d think we’d learn. “No more boats!” (she didn’t say airplane)
I remember when I assembled my XXL DIY 3D printer. I had missed something. The 3D drawing was ok but I completely ignored how I actually would assemble it and that there needed to be space left at least for a tool or better for a hand... 🤦♂️🪛
Hi! Small correction at the 27:02 mark: the foam inside the hull does not alter the displacement of the hull and, therefore, does not provide any surplus buoyancy compared to an empty hull shell. On the contrary, it adds weight and pulls the boat a bit lower into the water. It only provides any surplus buoyancy in the case when the hull is breached, since it won't allow any water ingress into the cavity inside the hull shell. As long as the shell itself is intact, the foam literally only adds weight to the hull and does not improve buoyancy one bit ;)
Thanks again for making a long format video rather than the 16 part series on how to “tap a nail”, even with forced sponsor ads it doesn’t detract from the entertainment. Thank you for staying original throughout, it really is appreciated
I feel I owe you an apology for my doubt/impatience. This was truly an impressive build that had far more complexities and challenges than I could have ever imagined. Well done! In the medium size range, you could print a benchy large enough to wear as a hat... but then it'd be capsized.
This is so cool! I tried to float a freshly printed benchy, but I couldn't get it to stay upright, it capsized immediately. I concluded that a benchy doesn't really work well as a boat 🙂 Color my surprise you are sailing around in one! Mega kudos!
I have been waiting so long for you to do this and totally does not disappoint! As usual, you went above and beyond and I can't wait to see this in person. Maybe you can rent it out to shows around the world! I know it would be a great attraction even if it wasn't floating. Great, great job doc. Thanks very much for all that effort. You have been promoted to Captain!🙂
@@DrDFlo Yes, it will take you forever to hand sort even 100 pounds. Also, I would put a metal detector in thee auto sorter just in case there fine metal shavings the sifters in it don't catch so that you can stop it since apparently anything can fall into the plastic production line.
Not only the largest Benchy, but the most functional. The last one made required ballasts to keep afloat, and that took away from the original design. You added a keel, but they are low profile and you can't see it in the water, so that's a big win!
Great project and great video! Im so glad someone finally made a REAL Benchy! But one criticism I have; really, displacement is the *only* way to float. It might be useful to think of the density explination in some cases, but it ignores the fact that the mechanics at play are exactly the same. It's just that density directly correlates mass-displacement to volume, without any geometry tricks. Also, floatation is independent of surface area; there is no correlation between depth of float/displacement and surface area. I imagine you ment cross sectional area?
You are right! Sorry, the reason I brought flotation vs displacement up is that if a boat is constructed from a material denser than water, then it will sink to the bottom of a waterway if it capsizes. I had an irrational fear that my boat would sink due to gaps in the layers or some other miscalculation and I wouldn’t be able to get it out. I appreciate you taking the time to leave this comment!
Hey, I love this project. Can’t believe your printer made it look soo flawless! :) good job. And I wanted to say you should try to make a speed boat next.
What was the thought process for picking the Archimedes chord infill pattern for the hull? Wouldn't grid be better since it would provide more area to support the front section?
So any infill that overlaps in the same layer is difficult for my extruder to push through due to the larger extrusion widths and is more likely to cause the part to come unadhered. The reason I selected Archimedes is because it is the longest most continuous infill, which minimizes non-printing moves. Pellet extruders exhibit more extrusion artifacts when starting and stopping.
50K in 2 days ain't bad. In fact, I'm pretty sure your most recent videos aren't hitting that many after weeks - and they deserve 10x more views as well!
We like people who design, modify and produce instead of producing ready-made designs. This was a really impressive project and I watched it breathlessly.
This won't win any speed benchy contest. Still top notch. It is very clear, that just a sized up original model won't do it and it has to meet certain features to be registered. Has some Steamboat Willy vibes.
I met you all at the TN Maker Fest back at the end of September. I shared your video link with my robotics group who are always very interested in all things maker. You probably met several of our members at Maker Fest as well! Excellent work! Such a fun project and you have it very well documented here!
Ever since I first heard about 3D-printers I've always wanted to print a life-sized boat! You give me so much motivation to actually do this crazy project some day
about 39 minutes in, I hope you aren't too sick of boats to not try and make a boat for peak efficency! Obviously had to do benchy for the meme, but I would love to see an attempt at a real deal badass boat! or even a submarine! amazing stuff!
Awesome project! In my opinion it's the benchmark for a life sized benchy. Very smart to add the foam into the hull, doesn't add much weight but prevents the hull from ever taking on water!
It's always great to see people push 3D printing to it's limits for amazing projects such as this. Some might say that you've really pushed the boat out with this one.....
You can buy handles for the Anderson connectors, and considering every use of them I see has a handle attached, I think you need them, especially for the larger sized connectors.
Very happy to see that you sealed the entire exposed side of the hull with resin. On your reddit post a few days ago, you said that "it's printed water tight" but that you had gone over seams with resin. And I got torn apart in the comments for daring to mention that no FDM print (or pellet fed) is fully water tight, due to microscopic voids between layers. So I'm super happy to see the full layer of resin to seal it all!
Well, he did say in the video that the outer epoxy is for making it easier to clean/scrub and he mentioned specifically it was not for water tightness, so not sure what you are aiming at. That said, I would have also expected such a step to be neccessary for making it water tight ao I was surprised myself. And after all, he also does show one leaks later in the video at 28:12.
@alexhill2852 it shows him covering the entire hull with resin. He said on reddit that resin was only applied to the seams. I'm just glad he coated it in resin. Because, again, NO FDM prints are ever going to be perfectly water tight. I don't care if the guy in the video says it was printed water tight. It's not. Leaks are inevitable. Resin helps with that immensely. Thank you for coming to my TED talk
I've commented before about my dad being VP of Production at a company building industrial-scale machines with dual printing and cutting gantries. One of their first customers was a boat manufacturer that uses the printer to print molds for fiberglass. They have a 20ft by 20ft section of a sailboat hull on the plant floor, and it's by far the largest 3D print I've ever seen. You could print your entire Benchy on one of these printers in one go! 🤣 I wish I could see someone like you have a go on one of them, but they're prohibitively expensive for anyone but medium-large businesses.
Thanks so much for sharing all the ups and downs of this project. I have a suggestion for a follow-up project: do another boat, but do it in vase mode with the least possible material, and then skin the shell in resin + glass or CF, and compare the material and time investment against this one, alongside the usability of the final product. I think it'd be educational and revealing about how to efficiently apply a machine like yours in light of the scaling challenges of the materials and processes we're using at a desktop scale in the FDM world.
I'm surprised you didnt build and test float a scale model first. Boat builders and designers almost always build and test scale models before they go ahead with a final design. You would have quickly realized your design was top heavy. As someone who grew up around boats and the water I knew right away your boat was top heavy. Im surprised you got as far as you did before realizing it wasnt gonna work well.
Oh I printed quite a few models that floated well in my bathtub. But it was difficult to model the effects of the foam and the different materials present in the cabin. Also, I underestimated how much my movement would affect the stability. If I was more knowledgeable when I started this project, then I probably would never have attempted it. I had the perfect amount of boat stupidity and 3D printing smarts to persevere 😂
@@DrDFlo You could have used a playmobil figure to simulate yourself, and used any strong fan to simulate wind. Even something like Trailmakers would have been good enough to show that the design was going to be too top heavy. Some kind of keel would have helped a lot, or even just giving the hull a bit more of a V shape. But then it's not exactly Benchy anymore, I suppose.
Bravo! Considering the original Benchy doesn't float, I'd say anything past that is an improvement. Congrats! I just noticed we're in the same city. I hope to randomly encounter this some time.
I love this. it turned out really well. I also enjoyed the quirk of his accent that made him pronounce hull as hole. Lots of tittering when he talked about flat bottom holes etc.
I don't know what's more impressive...that you made a full size benchy, or that you printed a benchy while sailing in a benchy! IMPRESSIVE for sure. BTW, what do you do for a living?
im glad someone actually made one that properly is a boat. Emily's was cool and all, but it just didnt really work. (Not hating or picking a side. I looooved Emily's video!)
Print hollow and use foam like a real boat. Less weight and when you get a puncture that void won't fill with water. The foam is closed cell structural and adhesive all in one. Place a shallow heavy keel under the boat to counteract the top heaviness.
what you couldve done in the boat design is including a keel/center board inorder to make it easier to navigate against current and wind, but also lower the center of mass.
Longships actually had rocks at the bottom of the hull to lower their center of gravity since they were made to be able to navigate shallow bodies of water and the north sea. It could be something to think about if you ever do another boat.
I saw the reddit post and finally it popped up in my suggestions. I would love to see what you did with the failed prints? Do you have a way to recycle them? I assume creating pellets would be a bit easier than extruding consistent filament.
Now you and Emily need to collab for a race to see who's Benchy is truly superior
I think Emily's is better in terms of being an actual benchy, not a different model. But in terms of being a boat, this guys is better.
EDIT: not taking sides, they each have their strong points
@@real_e fr
@@real_e Emily just sized up a model... She put effort into assembly, but this guy actually made a functional boat, and I think most people would associate this boat with a benchy.
Don't get me wrong I don't dislike Emily's video but this is way cooler and much more functional.
Oh, I think Emily would fully accept that this boat is functionally much better; as, she's all about the janky, she's the queen of the bodge, the matriarch of the kludge
Emily's Benchy is a semifunctional shitpost, and that's amazing in its own right. But as a boat? Ehhhhh, not so much.
“As a good engineer, I decided to do the math AFTER my design didn’t work”.
Holy crap, soooo relate. You’d think we’d learn.
“No more boats!”
(she didn’t say airplane)
I remember when I assembled my XXL DIY 3D printer. I had missed something. The 3D drawing was ok but I completely ignored how I actually would assemble it and that there needed to be space left at least for a tool or better for a hand... 🤦♂️🪛
Yep been there always seems that the idea is its driving force until physics gets a foot in the project.
Dr. D-"Float"
Hahahaha
More like the Chic-fil-A cruise.
Yes
D flows
Hi! Small correction at the 27:02 mark: the foam inside the hull does not alter the displacement of the hull and, therefore, does not provide any surplus buoyancy compared to an empty hull shell. On the contrary, it adds weight and pulls the boat a bit lower into the water. It only provides any surplus buoyancy in the case when the hull is breached, since it won't allow any water ingress into the cavity inside the hull shell. As long as the shell itself is intact, the foam literally only adds weight to the hull and does not improve buoyancy one bit ;)
You are technically correct: the best kind of correct.
@@dmdeemerits not even technically correct hes just literally correct
Hmm idk, sounds like a conspiracy theory. Are you sure you got that science rizz?
@@PunakiviAddikti Neil Degrasse Tyson put his stamp of approval on that comment, I can smell it from here.
Printing a Benchy on your Benchy.. That has to be the fastest like I've ever given a video. Nicely done!
Benchy-ception
Now THIS is a 3D printed benchy. 10/10 work!
That's naught a boat.
Now THAT'S a boat.
finally, someone uses total boat on an actual boat
are you telling me 18,000 river tables aren't boats?? I've been lied to - my whole life is a sham!
Thanks again for making a long format video rather than the 16 part series on how to “tap a nail”, even with forced sponsor ads it doesn’t detract from the entertainment. Thank you for staying original throughout, it really is appreciated
Thats my professor!!! Congrats on the success Professor Florian!⚓️
Holy crap, your explaination of the overturning moment was wonderful. What an amazing project, loved every minute!
Well done @DrDFlo 👏Great to see our MDPE10 extruder in action!
Yep
I feel I owe you an apology for my doubt/impatience. This was truly an impressive build that had far more complexities and challenges than I could have ever imagined. Well done!
In the medium size range, you could print a benchy large enough to wear as a hat... but then it'd be capsized.
Take my upvote and get out of here! 😂
Curious to see how different it'll be from when Emily the Engineer did it.
Different? From the trailer it's 100x better 👌👌
Don't worry, Dr. DFlo ACTUALLY delivers
D-Flo's boat is more functional as a boat, Emily's is more true to the original benchy design.
@@ryanohoro3764 Exactly
@@Ndetonados also the budget was about over9000 times higher...
This is so cool! I tried to float a freshly printed benchy, but I couldn't get it to stay upright, it capsized immediately. I concluded that a benchy doesn't really work well as a boat 🙂
Color my surprise you are sailing around in one! Mega kudos!
This is the slowest Benchy print of all time. That was very entertaining and I learned a ton BTW.
I have been waiting so long for you to do this and totally does not disappoint! As usual, you went above and beyond and I can't wait to see this in person. Maybe you can rent it out to shows around the world! I know it would be a great attraction even if it wasn't floating. Great, great job doc. Thanks very much for all that effort. You have been promoted to Captain!🙂
Glad that you enjoyed it! Thank you for your patience and support
Incredible! Great application for your printer! I’m surprised you didn’t make a sieve machine (siever?) to automate separating the pellets.
Ah we should have - great idea! I kept underestimating how long it would take to sort the ~800lbs
@@DrDFlo Yes, it will take you forever to hand sort even 100 pounds. Also, I would put a metal detector in thee auto sorter just in case there fine metal shavings the sifters in it don't catch so that you can stop it since apparently anything can fall into the plastic production line.
Not only the largest Benchy, but the most functional. The last one made required ballasts to keep afloat, and that took away from the original design. You added a keel, but they are low profile and you can't see it in the water, so that's a big win!
I honestly thought you would never do it the last time you mentioned it. BUT YOU DID!!! Absolute star, top job Prof. I'm so impressed.
I have been waiting for this video for two years. You have always come through with your best work. Epic art thanks for sharing.
Great project and great video! Im so glad someone finally made a REAL Benchy!
But one criticism I have; really, displacement is the *only* way to float. It might be useful to think of the density explination in some cases, but it ignores the fact that the mechanics at play are exactly the same. It's just that density directly correlates mass-displacement to volume, without any geometry tricks. Also, floatation is independent of surface area; there is no correlation between depth of float/displacement and surface area. I imagine you ment cross sectional area?
You are right! Sorry, the reason I brought flotation vs displacement up is that if a boat is constructed from a material denser than water, then it will sink to the bottom of a waterway if it capsizes. I had an irrational fear that my boat would sink due to gaps in the layers or some other miscalculation and I wouldn’t be able to get it out. I appreciate you taking the time to leave this comment!
Hey, I love this project. Can’t believe your printer made it look soo flawless! :) good job. And I wanted to say you should try to make a speed boat next.
This is the pinnacle of 3D printing and youtube content!!! Brilliant work!!!! You make such incredible content. Keep it up!
What was the thought process for picking the Archimedes chord infill pattern for the hull? Wouldn't grid be better since it would provide more area to support the front section?
So any infill that overlaps in the same layer is difficult for my extruder to push through due to the larger extrusion widths and is more likely to cause the part to come unadhered. The reason I selected Archimedes is because it is the longest most continuous infill, which minimizes non-printing moves. Pellet extruders exhibit more extrusion artifacts when starting and stopping.
@@DrDFlo I see, thank you!
What a properly 3d printed big benchy 🔥🔥🔥🔥
This video should have 10X more views. Well done sir.
50K in 2 days ain't bad. In fact, I'm pretty sure your most recent videos aren't hitting that many after weeks - and they deserve 10x more views as well!
We like people who design, modify and produce instead of producing ready-made designs. This was a really impressive project and I watched it breathlessly.
Absolutely stellar video. The effort that went into this is mind boggling. Top notch project, execution, story telling, and animations. Well done!
Dr. D-Flo you are the Master. I am learning a lot from you.
Amazing. I taught a few of my assistant students to use our 3D printers and used your videos as material :)
If is on of the coolest most creative things I've seen done in a long time 👌👌
My dude, this is freaking incredible. Well done.
This won't win any speed benchy contest.
Still top notch. It is very clear, that just a sized up original model won't do it and it has to meet certain features to be registered. Has some Steamboat Willy vibes.
He technically is in 1st place for this size category.
I think that is way faster than like 99.99% of benchys actually. 3 MPH isn't much, but most benchys don't have motors.
Thanks!
I really appreciate it! Thank you for the support
Looking good! 😍
I met you all at the TN Maker Fest back at the end of September. I shared your video link with my robotics group who are always very interested in all things maker. You probably met several of our members at Maker Fest as well!
Excellent work! Such a fun project and you have it very well documented here!
I salute you captain. Nice to see you have put your engineering soul into the problem.
Next project: 3D print a house "La Printderosa"
19:30 We deserve that father-in-law moment you will never see on TV!
Wow this is extremely impressive, can't imagine how many hours went into it!
....Im not missing that video right now! Great job man!
nice F job! i was here for the build of the printer, i'm here for the boat , that's awesome
Super cool build! You did a great job keeping it true benchy.
I think it would be really cool to see you build a boat with a more sea worthy design.
Ever since I first heard about 3D-printers I've always wanted to print a life-sized boat! You give me so much motivation to actually do this crazy project some day
Great video as always man! 👍
What an incredible project. I remember when you mentioned planning to do this in your large format printer series, glad it finally worked out!
Thank you!! I appreciate your patience!
about 39 minutes in, I hope you aren't too sick of boats to not try and make a boat for peak efficency! Obviously had to do benchy for the meme, but I would love to see an attempt at a real deal badass boat! or even a submarine! amazing stuff!
This is TOO COOL for TH-cam!
Awesome project! In my opinion it's the benchmark for a life sized benchy. Very smart to add the foam into the hull, doesn't add much weight but prevents the hull from ever taking on water!
Thank you for all your hard work and sharing with all of us.I will share this on my Socials.
Amazingly insane build! ;) Love it! ;)
So cool mate, well done 😊👍
Wow, that is incredible. Next, how about a House?😊
Man that is cool. I'd love to do a project like this. perhaps maybe one day......
Very cool! Your pellet printer is amazing 🤩
As a fellow printer I say excellent job!!
That's sick!!🎉
thats the cutest boat ive ever seen :)
Now we need a miniature version that we can use to test prints and that will become functional toys that float 😅! Amazing work and amazing video!
Hello. My son and I watched your video this morning before work and school… so interesting and cool! We are so curious to know what field you studied.
It's always great to see people push 3D printing to it's limits for amazing projects such as this. Some might say that you've really pushed the boat out with this one.....
You wouldn't download a boat....
heck you, I would, I could, I did!
Very nice! Good work 💪
I love the boat's name.
This is so beautiful. Thanks for making this, and showcasing this to us. 😍
Aye Captain Dr.. D-Flo!
unbelievably cool man
You can buy handles for the Anderson connectors, and considering every use of them I see has a handle attached, I think you need them, especially for the larger sized connectors.
That's amazing - well done! 😎
did you make these parts on a software online or did you download them
Very happy to see that you sealed the entire exposed side of the hull with resin. On your reddit post a few days ago, you said that "it's printed water tight" but that you had gone over seams with resin. And I got torn apart in the comments for daring to mention that no FDM print (or pellet fed) is fully water tight, due to microscopic voids between layers. So I'm super happy to see the full layer of resin to seal it all!
Well, he did say in the video that the outer epoxy is for making it easier to clean/scrub and he mentioned specifically it was not for water tightness, so not sure what you are aiming at. That said, I would have also expected such a step to be neccessary for making it water tight ao I was surprised myself. And after all, he also does show one leaks later in the video at 28:12.
@alexhill2852 it shows him covering the entire hull with resin. He said on reddit that resin was only applied to the seams. I'm just glad he coated it in resin. Because, again, NO FDM prints are ever going to be perfectly water tight. I don't care if the guy in the video says it was printed water tight. It's not. Leaks are inevitable. Resin helps with that immensely. Thank you for coming to my TED talk
I've commented before about my dad being VP of Production at a company building industrial-scale machines with dual printing and cutting gantries. One of their first customers was a boat manufacturer that uses the printer to print molds for fiberglass. They have a 20ft by 20ft section of a sailboat hull on the plant floor, and it's by far the largest 3D print I've ever seen. You could print your entire Benchy on one of these printers in one go! 🤣 I wish I could see someone like you have a go on one of them, but they're prohibitively expensive for anyone but medium-large businesses.
Awesome!
I like the "recycled plastic" approach too.
Great presentation about all the engineering that went into this project!!
this thing is sickkkk you did a great job on it !
Thanks so much for sharing all the ups and downs of this project. I have a suggestion for a follow-up project: do another boat, but do it in vase mode with the least possible material, and then skin the shell in resin + glass or CF, and compare the material and time investment against this one, alongside the usability of the final product. I think it'd be educational and revealing about how to efficiently apply a machine like yours in light of the scaling challenges of the materials and processes we're using at a desktop scale in the FDM world.
I'm surprised you didnt build and test float a scale model first. Boat builders and designers almost always build and test scale models before they go ahead with a final design. You would have quickly realized your design was top heavy. As someone who grew up around boats and the water I knew right away your boat was top heavy. Im surprised you got as far as you did before realizing it wasnt gonna work well.
Oh I printed quite a few models that floated well in my bathtub. But it was difficult to model the effects of the foam and the different materials present in the cabin. Also, I underestimated how much my movement would affect the stability. If I was more knowledgeable when I started this project, then I probably would never have attempted it. I had the perfect amount of boat stupidity and 3D printing smarts to persevere 😂
@@DrDFlo You could have used a playmobil figure to simulate yourself, and used any strong fan to simulate wind. Even something like Trailmakers would have been good enough to show that the design was going to be too top heavy. Some kind of keel would have helped a lot, or even just giving the hull a bit more of a V shape. But then it's not exactly Benchy anymore, I suppose.
3D printing a benchy on top of another benchy, and actually on the water - that's quite impressive! :)
Bravo! Considering the original Benchy doesn't float, I'd say anything past that is an improvement. Congrats! I just noticed we're in the same city. I hope to randomly encounter this some time.
I would mould a 4" keel to the bottom of that before it capsizes - (MGB) applies.
3:13 ... that cable is doomed
Was thinking just that, a shroud would do wonders for that cable's safety.
painting the whole boat with laquer might have been easier for waterproofing, but not foolproof either. Incredible job!
I love this. it turned out really well. I also enjoyed the quirk of his accent that made him pronounce hull as hole. Lots of tittering when he talked about flat bottom holes etc.
I don't know what's more impressive...that you made a full size benchy, or that you printed a benchy while sailing in a benchy! IMPRESSIVE for sure.
BTW, what do you do for a living?
44:48 They make 24v trolling motors, and you already have 2 batteries, which could be connected in series.
im glad someone actually made one that properly is a boat. Emily's was cool and all, but it just didnt really work. (Not hating or picking a side. I looooved Emily's video!)
Awesome! You rock my friend!😍
That is really cool. 😊
Crushed it! This was super cool, great job seeing this project through - it didn't look like it was too easy!
Brilliant.
Liz says she is super impressed!
Print hollow and use foam like a real boat. Less weight and when you get a puncture that void won't fill with water. The foam is closed cell structural and adhesive all in one. Place a shallow heavy keel under the boat to counteract the top heaviness.
Wow a lot of work, time, effort, and money, but by golly it looks good! Well done!
what you couldve done in the boat design is including a keel/center board inorder to make it easier to navigate against current and wind, but also lower the center of mass.
dude this is epic
Congratulation, nice job. Big kiss from France.
Longships actually had rocks at the bottom of the hull to lower their center of gravity since they were made to be able to navigate shallow bodies of water and the north sea.
It could be something to think about if you ever do another boat.
Seriously, HOW does this video not have more views??
So much fun from a printer - love it! 😊👍
I saw the reddit post and finally it popped up in my suggestions. I would love to see what you did with the failed prints? Do you have a way to recycle them? I assume creating pellets would be a bit easier than extruding consistent filament.