If James ever stops building these huge machines, filament prices will plummet. I would be really interested to see how many kilos he puts through the printer every month. 😂
@@koleoidea Yes that would be quite entertaining. And the number of print hours culumulatively added up per build. I bet he has more than 1 3D printer!
@@jamesbruton this whole project personifies Adam Savage's declaration that engineering youtube is basically what if you gave a 10 year old the money and the knowledge of how to build a thing, and I love it. You should reach out to him to show him it when its done. I'm sure he'd love it.
@@miclowgunman1987 I would be astounded if Adam hasn't already seen this, he's like the patron saint of TH-cam makers! And with his history in movie props, it would be awesome to see him visit (or bring James onto Tested to show off the finished AT-AT!)
1:1 scale is 22m tall, that's a bit much for one person to build. He'd need something a little more than just extrusions and 3d printer filament to build it
I genuinely feel that you are single-handedly proving just how good 3D printing can get. I still see a lot of people. Dismiss 3D printing is some crappy week frail process that produces fragile parts that want to disintegrate at the slightest touch, but you have proven quite the opposite honestly
Good is debatable. The quality of his prints mostly isn’t that good because he needs functional parts quick. That’s absolutely fine. But is that a measurement for “good printing”?
@@MrRevenant333 i think it means 3D printing has valid use cases outside of gimmicky multicolored toys. it's not about fine detail or quality and surface finish. it can quickly chug out huge strong parts for massive robot prototyping :D
Yes and no. It's great what James is building but 3d printing has proved that already by being used in the airline industry and elsewhere. Of course with much higher costs but without having to produce large numbers of pieces.
His projects are awesome, but 3D printing is a terrible choice for fabricating something like this unless you are sponsored by 3D printing companies. Just these legs would be thousands of dollars in print filament and an insane amount of print hours even with the large nozzles. You could use more aluminum extrusion and make the other parts from glued up layers of MDF or plywood for a small fraction of the price and time. It would likely even be cheaper to have a lot of the 3D printed pieces laser cut and formed by one of the many companies that offer those services. It would also end up lighter and stronger that way.
if this project was real sized then plastic wouldn't be enough to hold the weight due to the length of each part.. not to mention he wouldn't be able to print the parts due to their size either...
You're my favorite robotics builder on TH-cam. You're such an inspiration! I just finished converting my kid's old Power Wheel to remote control with a 3D printed sprocket on the steering column to turn using a motor and a chain. It's super fun to see a 5' skeleton driving a little jeep 😂
Meanwhile in a rebel garage engineers are surely working on a drone which dispenses string with a hook on the end ... Wonderful job, keep up the great work 😀👍
Well, since a random tree branch tied to the pursuing drone couldn't definitively shatter that rear propeller... every commenter suggested tangling it with netting instead.
What's amazing is most TH-camrs are 8 months into a project "here's part 45 of my build". James is like 1 month in "here's most of an AT-AT walker". This man doesn't sleep!! 😀
I wanted to write something smart, but I am speechless... THIS IS SOOOO COOOOL!!!! It just shows how powerfull of a tool 3d printing really is when you design everything around it. Not some tool to imitate production of a part, but a part designed for 3d printing can as usefull as any other technology.
That printer is a very interesting solution to an actually common problem. Lots of people print long rectangle parts (or ones that fit in a long rectangle), but few print huge cubes - so having a printer that violates the Cubed print volume, thereby saving some space, to make one or two axises longer makes a lot of sense!
James, we need a timelapse of all the work you do! Don't get me wrong, the highlight reels that are your videos are amazing and I watch them as soon as I can when they come out, but I would love to see just how much work and printing hours happen to make a project like this reality 😊 You're doing awesome, inspiring work!
Unbiased thumbs-up for Simply Bearings: really excellent company, easy site to use and always excellent service. Can't wait for episode 2, this thing is going to be a monster!
Actually blown away. Having gone to Makers Central UK due to both my sons interests in engineering, I began to be fascinated in this type of project. Today I saw my son watching this video and now I'm hooked! I need part 2! Seriously clever and really cool!
dude this is so awesome. i didn't realize 3d printed stuff would be that strong, i've heard a lot about it being brittle and weak. very cool to see that with the right design and materials, it can do some pretty amazing stuff. can't wait to see the next part, this whole process is fascinating and i am very grateful how thoroughly you explain and demonstrate each bit. thanks for the vid and your hard work!!
@@jamesbruton Yikes, PLA? Well, if it holds up, great, but at something this size if it starts struggling with carrying any sort of weight you might want to upgrade to nylon composites. This is a REALLY huge build and I'd be concerned about it holding up. Then again, that could just be my combat robotics experience making me paranoid about the material choice.
8:07 I have always had trouble with math, and run away from the lateral thinking I need for this kind of thing, but you explained it so well it kind of just blew my mind
I like how it was just a detailed explanation of the build process for this extreme time consuming, large part, and at the end he’s just like, “Yea so of course I build four of them.”
Wow, I can't wait for part 2. Thanks for all the hard work planning, creating, assembling, recording, editing and uploading (that's a lot of work)! Yours is simply one of the BEST youtube channels of them all!
Glad to see you're having a go at-at this project. Hope this thing works better than a horse. It'll be slow going, but at least you'll have better control over it.
All these massive machines are just too cool! James has so much experience doing what he loves that massive robots and large scale machines are now entirely within his skill set, and it’s nothing short of inspiring. I can’t wait to see this thing piloted!
Your scale of these builds on these average sized 3d printers are amazing. It takes alot of effort just to, design, test, rebuild, and create parts this size, let alone 4 TIMES!
Yknow theres like A group of youtubers Who like If they formed a coalition Could legit run their whole entire own little mad genius supervillain plots together And this dude james bruton is one of them
You forgot the maddest lad of them all styropyro But then theres all those experimental drone and robotics dudes too Those polish submersible ROV dudes, the multiple scandinavian college kids making powered boats, that german guy scratchbuilding replica airframes at kind of a shockingly large scale We would be toast
AMAZING! You never seem to disappoint! I can't wait to see the completed result. I think that this device, although is a fun project to mess with, I see it moving further into other uses for everyday activities. 👍😎
James, I’ve been watching you since before the OG hulk buster series 9 years ago. First time I’ve visited in a while tbh but it’s amazing to see how far you have come. Keep doing amazing things.
This is simply mind blowing. The level of this build, the size, the materials, the tests in between fases... You are the absolute image of the inventor/nutty-professor from the comic books i read as a kid. I can't even say how much i love this. :D
0:31 Interesting that the original design used gears instead of belts. I have poor engineering knowledge, but gears have wear and backlash problems which I don't think is ideal for long-time use and precision?
And at this moment, he pulls three more feet of his backpack. Me dying on my chair. First James' video I watch, and I appreciate TH-cam recommandations working so well !
I’d recommend for adding a little bit of traction to the bottom of the foot that it should be the traction padding used to keep carpets from sliding around wooden floors or a thin rubber surface it might help with sliding backwards a bit
😅 not just disney, companies like buston robotics, military research into exoskeletons should consider contracting James as a consultant, his single handedly among the best mechanical and robotics engineers on youtube 😅😅 i mean check out this build and all that time invested for just entertaining us the audience, i swear hands down, James is the type of mentor kids and anyone who wants to become an engineer should look up too instead of the boring professors and tedious university lectures to learn these stuff that ends up even making those with genuine interests in engineering drop out
Seems like you could bolt part of a brake rotor on those smaller gears and have a caliper that holds the pads under pressure with spring tension, until a solenoid is energized by the servo power, which in turn releases the brakes and allows the gear to move freely while the servo motors around. Or program some kind of delay to the motors while the solenoid engages or disengages the brake. This would act as an automatic position hold without needing to constantly input power to the motors.
I don't think I've ever heard anyone refer to it as "the Star Wars" before but it kinda makes sense... I guess. Cool vid as always, love these massive projects. Your techniques for making things easy to adjust are very clever
This is an awesome project infact it's now my favourite project you've done for quite some time,probably because I'm a 45 year old big star wars nerd but that's story for another time lol😂can't wait to this project progress. Good luck with it. And may the force be with you! Sorry couldn't help myself lol😂❤❤❤
Amazing project, The gearing looks perfect but the axels look small, could use bigger shafts and thinner bearings in the most loaded areas. . interesting origional artwork for the walker, the joints were from a motor with a worm drive to an idler to the main joint cog. the motors look like a ring with holes in.
Damn... I follow you for a few years I think. First video I saw from you was small Arduino robots... I look so much forward to what you will construct not only in every further video, but especially in 5 years... You are awesome!
We all have talents in different areas. I am so thankful for the inspiration that comes in software engineering for me. I am amazed nonetheless by the inspiration or design that comes to you in mechanical engineering. Maybe that comes a little by experience too, just doing the stuff we do until it becomes something we can create with plus the University degree. Anyways, if I get a chance it would be fun to design more in Industrial Design which I think you do some as well since it isn't just parts and unsightly prints of default mechanisms. In all, I think I'm just talking about something I heard of as design thinking.
I love seeing 3D printing to make large structural items like this! (You wimped out by using 80/20 extrusions though. True fanatics eschew metal for anything but fasteners and motors 😉) I love your vids, am in awe do your mechanical design and CAD skills 👍👍👍
The scale! The filament! The swing! Amazing.
Hacksmith in 1 year: "We got the totally original idea to build a ridable AT-AT!" **breaks after 5 steps because they forgot about leverage**
@@NyeMechworks2 year later: Now we put a real laser on it!
@@Lordsandero 2 1/2 years later: Now we put a "lightsaber" on it! also....buy our merch!
you guys should make one too
I can’t believe hacksmith actually saw this
If James ever stops building these huge machines, filament prices will plummet. I would be really interested to see how many kilos he puts through the printer every month. 😂
Yeah i would love to see a count in the video of how much filament he used in each video like a score.
@@koleoidea Yes that would be quite entertaining. And the number of print hours culumulatively added up per build. I bet he has more than 1 3D printer!
ISTR him saying he gets it delivered by the pallet...
@@dash8brji guess if he have just one the the legs are ready in march 2027😂😂😂
The factory is next door. The filament comes straight out of their extruder, through a hole in the wall, and into his printer. Nice.
Me: Considering the necessity for printing parts greater than 5h
James: Hold my three tons of filament
Longest was about 12 h
@@jamesbruton this whole project personifies Adam Savage's declaration that engineering youtube is basically what if you gave a 10 year old the money and the knowledge of how to build a thing, and I love it. You should reach out to him to show him it when its done. I'm sure he'd love it.
@@miclowgunman1987 there is zero chance Adam isnt already subscribed lol
@@miclowgunman1987 I would be astounded if Adam hasn't already seen this, he's like the patron saint of TH-cam makers! And with his history in movie props, it would be awesome to see him visit (or bring James onto Tested to show off the finished AT-AT!)
@tested should definitely do that
Every time you said “A T dash A T” I died a little inside (I kid, of course)
It was impressive commitment to the bit. I kept expecting him to slip up, but his attention to detail is clearly a forte!
The Star Wars.
Live long and may the force be forever in your favor
It's clearly pronounced @@
I am too and I am much more a Trekkie than I am into Star Wars, but that said, IT'S AT AT not A T dash A T. DAMN IT MAN...
Cant wait to see the 1:1 scale replica! thats the natural progression
dark side cooking with this one :/ gg light side...
I wonder if material science would need to be involved at that point or of it's just a simple job.
1:1 scale is 22m tall, that's a bit much for one person to build. He'd need something a little more than just extrusions and 3d printer filament to build it
@@dylanstonemusic1614 dont crush a mans dreams with realism!
@@BH-rx3ueJust saying he probably needs some help with construction and as far as building materials, he might need a bit more than printer filament
I genuinely feel that you are single-handedly proving just how good 3D printing can get. I still see a lot of people. Dismiss 3D printing is some crappy week frail process that produces fragile parts that want to disintegrate at the slightest touch, but you have proven quite the opposite honestly
Good is debatable. The quality of his prints mostly isn’t that good because he needs functional parts quick. That’s absolutely fine. But is that a measurement for “good printing”?
@@MrRevenant333 i think it means 3D printing has valid use cases outside of gimmicky multicolored toys. it's not about fine detail or quality and surface finish. it can quickly chug out huge strong parts for massive robot prototyping :D
Yes and no. It's great what James is building but 3d printing has proved that already by being used in the airline industry and elsewhere. Of course with much higher costs but without having to produce large numbers of pieces.
His projects are awesome, but 3D printing is a terrible choice for fabricating something like this unless you are sponsored by 3D printing companies. Just these legs would be thousands of dollars in print filament and an insane amount of print hours even with the large nozzles. You could use more aluminum extrusion and make the other parts from glued up layers of MDF or plywood for a small fraction of the price and time. It would likely even be cheaper to have a lot of the 3D printed pieces laser cut and formed by one of the many companies that offer those services. It would also end up lighter and stronger that way.
if this project was real sized then plastic wouldn't be enough to hold the weight due to the length of each part.. not to mention he wouldn't be able to print the parts due to their size either...
crazy an at-hyphen-aye tee
@-IT?
Calling it an A T dash A T is a troll to drive engagement, and I’m a sucker. Good work 😂
Classic TH-camr Bait
You're my favorite robotics builder on TH-cam. You're such an inspiration! I just finished converting my kid's old Power Wheel to remote control with a 3D printed sprocket on the steering column to turn using a motor and a chain. It's super fun to see a 5' skeleton driving a little jeep 😂
did you make a video of it?
Meanwhile in a rebel garage engineers are surely working on a drone which dispenses string with a hook on the end ...
Wonderful job, keep up the great work 😀👍
Well, since a random tree branch tied to the pursuing drone couldn't definitively shatter that rear propeller... every commenter suggested tangling it with netting instead.
What's amazing is most TH-camrs are 8 months into a project "here's part 45 of my build". James is like 1 month in "here's most of an AT-AT walker". This man doesn't sleep!! 😀
I wanted to write something smart, but I am speechless... THIS IS SOOOO COOOOL!!!! It just shows how powerfull of a tool 3d printing really is when you design everything around it. Not some tool to imitate production of a part, but a part designed for 3d printing can as usefull as any other technology.
Wow. A part 2. You know it’s a huge build if James breaks it into multiple videos.
That printer is a very interesting solution to an actually common problem. Lots of people print long rectangle parts (or ones that fit in a long rectangle), but few print huge cubes - so having a printer that violates the Cubed print volume, thereby saving some space, to make one or two axises longer makes a lot of sense!
If you arrive to any convention with this machine you'll be a king and a legend long remembered.
Omg. I love The Star Wars.
James, we need a timelapse of all the work you do! Don't get me wrong, the highlight reels that are your videos are amazing and I watch them as soon as I can when they come out, but I would love to see just how much work and printing hours happen to make a project like this reality 😊 You're doing awesome, inspiring work!
Dude how does this guy design these things so fast we are getting multiple videos monthly
Just get on with it
Unbiased thumbs-up for Simply Bearings: really excellent company, easy site to use and always excellent service.
Can't wait for episode 2, this thing is going to be a monster!
Actually blown away. Having gone to Makers Central UK due to both my sons interests in engineering, I began to be fascinated in this type of project. Today I saw my son watching this video and now I'm hooked! I need part 2! Seriously clever and really cool!
Part 2 comes up this month
This man is living the dream...
For real, I want to be a friend him 🥹
@@Basicamentesemteto - He is too busy living the dream to need friends...
dude this is so awesome. i didn't realize 3d printed stuff would be that strong, i've heard a lot about it being brittle and weak. very cool to see that with the right design and materials, it can do some pretty amazing stuff. can't wait to see the next part, this whole process is fascinating and i am very grateful how thoroughly you explain and demonstrate each bit. thanks for the vid and your hard work!!
This is only PLA, there are stronger materials also.
@@jamesbrutonI was just wondering about that. The bushings are also PLA?
@@jamesbruton
Yikes, PLA? Well, if it holds up, great, but at something this size if it starts struggling with carrying any sort of weight you might want to upgrade to nylon composites. This is a REALLY huge build and I'd be concerned about it holding up.
Then again, that could just be my combat robotics experience making me paranoid about the material choice.
@@VestedUTuberI’m sure he’s aware of that
8:07 I have always had trouble with math, and run away from the lateral thinking I need for this kind of thing, but you explained it so well it kind of just blew my mind
I like how it was just a detailed explanation of the build process for this extreme time consuming, large part, and at the end he’s just like,
“Yea so of course I build four of them.”
10/10 cant wait for part 2
Oh, I am all in for this, it's almost 1 a.m. I shouldn't really be going to sleep, but...
imagine sleeping
@@shash321 honestly
Wow, I can't wait for part 2. Thanks for all the hard work planning, creating, assembling, recording, editing and uploading (that's a lot of work)! Yours is simply one of the BEST youtube channels of them all!
Glad to see you're having a go at-at this project. Hope this thing works better than a horse. It'll be slow going, but at least you'll have better control over it.
It might have problems on rough terrains thou...
@@wurstelei1356 Yeah, I hear they don't do well in snow,
Ok. I've watched you for years, and on the title ALONE, IM VERY EXCITED RIGHT NOW!
I’ve met James before, I had a great time!
All these massive machines are just too cool! James has so much experience doing what he loves that massive robots and large scale machines are now entirely within his skill set, and it’s nothing short of inspiring. I can’t wait to see this thing piloted!
Amazing! I can't believe the tremendous quality of every project you make!
You're my favorite robotics builder on TH-cam.
0:21 guys please tell me im not the only one who thinks that he looks like the villian from big hero 6 in that outfit
Wow very impressive again! I’m amazed that all the 3d printed parts hold it and no one breaks! I’m looking forward to part 2!!!
Amazing James! Can’t wait to see you complete it
Your scale of these builds on these average sized 3d printers are amazing. It takes alot of effort just to, design, test, rebuild, and create parts this size, let alone 4 TIMES!
Yknow theres like
A group of youtubers
Who like
If they formed a coalition
Could legit run their whole entire own little mad genius supervillain plots together
And this dude james bruton is one of them
Some others include
Mark rober
Michael Reeves
I cant think of any more
You forgot the maddest lad of them all styropyro
But then theres all those experimental drone and robotics dudes too
Those polish submersible ROV dudes, the multiple scandinavian college kids making powered boats, that german guy scratchbuilding replica airframes at kind of a shockingly large scale
We would be toast
Basically anyone who would be at open sauce
AMAZING! You never seem to disappoint! I can't wait to see the completed result. I think that this device, although is a fun project to mess with, I see it moving further into other uses for everyday activities. 👍😎
Once again you blow me away with your ingenuity and skill. Absolutely brilliant.
This man needs to ride this into a star wars convention
James, I’ve been watching you since before the OG hulk buster series 9 years ago. First time I’ve visited in a while tbh but it’s amazing to see how far you have come. Keep doing amazing things.
This is simply mind blowing. The level of this build, the size, the materials, the tests in between fases... You are the absolute image of the inventor/nutty-professor from the comic books i read as a kid. I can't even say how much i love this. :D
0:31 Interesting that the original design used gears instead of belts. I have poor engineering knowledge, but gears have wear and backlash problems which I don't think is ideal for long-time use and precision?
This is awesome
Ok, NOW I'm impressed! Incredible!
And at this moment, he pulls three more feet of his backpack.
Me dying on my chair.
First James' video I watch, and I appreciate TH-cam recommandations working so well !
Excellent work on this @ Hyphen AT! Can't wait for part 2!
It is so incredible what some of you youtube makers can come up with and then deliver on.!
I'm constantly in awe of your dedication & consistency. Great stuff James.
Definitely on top of 3d printed robotics James.
To me the construction is more impressive than the printing.
I’d recommend for adding a little bit of traction to the bottom of the foot that it should be the traction padding used to keep carpets from sliding around wooden floors or a thin rubber surface it might help with sliding backwards a bit
Disney seriously needs to hire this guy to make the props for future starwars films👍
😅 not just disney, companies like buston robotics, military research into exoskeletons should consider contracting James as a consultant, his single handedly among the best mechanical and robotics engineers on youtube 😅😅 i mean check out this build and all that time invested for just entertaining us the audience, i swear hands down, James is the type of mentor kids and anyone who wants to become an engineer should look up too instead of the boring professors and tedious university lectures to learn these stuff that ends up even making those with genuine interests in engineering drop out
That is an insane amount of work! I'm seriously impressed with the engineering too.
Holy hell! I can not wait to see this finished. 😮
This man never ceases to amaze me! It feels like he can make litterally anything!
0:07
Everyone talks about saying it like, “A, T, A, T,” and, “AT AT,” but we have finally found the third contender, “A, T, dash A, T”
In a previous video, James even said "AT-A-T"!
In all my years, I literally just called it an At At, literally @@
Same
He’ll always be at at as @@ to me
Truly can't wait to see this finished build. Insane amount of work, absolutely amazing!
This is awesome, James!!!
I love how perfectly your smaller AT-AT model captures the stop-motion feel of the AT-ATs in Empire Strikes Back!
This build is going to be EPIC!!! Super excited for the next video!
Seems like you could bolt part of a brake rotor on those smaller gears and have a caliper that holds the pads under pressure with spring tension, until a solenoid is energized by the servo power, which in turn releases the brakes and allows the gear to move freely while the servo motors around. Or program some kind of delay to the motors while the solenoid engages or disengages the brake. This would act as an automatic position hold without needing to constantly input power to the motors.
Awesome! Can’t wait for part 2!
sweet video, but for all of our sakes, stop pronouncing the dash in AT-AT
Thanks bro
Yes that is so true
Him and AT-AT arent on that friendly bases yet, just give them time
Another epic build pushing the limits of what is possible.
I AM LOOKING AT IT!
IT'S AMAZING!
"ay tee dash ay tee" sounds wrong somehow. Baller project, though.
You never cease to amaze. Can't wait for part two
I don't think I've ever heard anyone refer to it as "the Star Wars" before but it kinda makes sense... I guess. Cool vid as always, love these massive projects. Your techniques for making things easy to adjust are very clever
Mega project, looking forward to the next steps
Looking great so far!
First we got a Lego Set, and now an actual rideable AT-AT? I like this build!
thats awesome! can't wait to see the finished product!
That is amazing! Can’t wait for part 2. I wish I was able to build the robots you build. Incredible builds plus a lot of learning!
ive missed these sort of really big projects!
This is the most hyped i have been for a James project since the BB8s
now try a 1:1 scale lego at-at
The orange shim just demonstrates how much experience you have in these projects and how much forethought you attack them with.
I love those cutaway books. Reminds me of the Richard Scarry books like Cars and Trucks and Things That Go. so much fun
Your sponsors are awesome!! Even besides that, these builds must cost you an absolute fortune!! Keep it up, you’re an inspiration!
Looking forward to the last leg of this process!
I'm not really into Star Wars, but I'm a big fan of this. Nice work!
Much much respect…you are motivating for going in engineering ❤
Thats what i want to see! BIG machines! thank you so much! ^^
This is an awesome project infact it's now my favourite project you've done for quite some time,probably because I'm a 45 year old big star wars nerd but that's story for another time lol😂can't wait to this project progress. Good luck with it. And may the force be with you! Sorry couldn't help myself lol😂❤❤❤
My very first video watched of yours and wow the scope of this project is massive !!! Talk about a show stopper at a comicon !
Very impressive I didn't expect it to be that big! 👍
This is amazing. I hope the legs stay uncovered to keep the whole mechanism exposed as it walks
Amazing project, The gearing looks perfect but the axels look small, could use bigger shafts and thinner bearings in the most loaded areas. . interesting origional artwork for the walker, the joints were from a motor with a worm drive to an idler to the main joint cog. the motors look like a ring with holes in.
Damn... I follow you for a few years I think. First video I saw from you was small Arduino robots... I look so much forward to what you will construct not only in every further video, but especially in 5 years... You are awesome!
Seeing something like this at a comic con just wandering around would be amazing
Very cool 80 dash 80
Brilliant. Love your big projects!
Your work is really amusing... Just wait for the part2
This is EPIC! You are the 3D Printing Goat!
Nobody:
James: "aye tea dash aye tea"
(Project is absolutely insane, love it)
We all have talents in different areas. I am so thankful for the inspiration that comes in software engineering for me. I am amazed nonetheless by the inspiration or design that comes to you in mechanical engineering. Maybe that comes a little by experience too, just doing the stuff we do until it becomes something we can create with plus the University degree. Anyways, if I get a chance it would be fun to design more in Industrial Design which I think you do some as well since it isn't just parts and unsightly prints of default mechanisms. In all, I think I'm just talking about something I heard of as design thinking.
I love seeing 3D printing to make large structural items like this!
(You wimped out by using 80/20 extrusions though. True fanatics eschew metal for anything but fasteners and motors 😉)
I love your vids, am in awe do your mechanical design and CAD skills 👍👍👍
lol what an intro. just walks out and waves
James, you’ve made what is basically giant LEGO Technic pieces! 😮