#181
Posted 20 July 2013 - 03:52 PM
#182
Posted 21 July 2013 - 05:40 AM
But still really good work, I shall be keeping an eye on your work in the future.
#183
Posted 21 July 2013 - 06:45 AM
Valcrow, on 20 July 2013 - 02:42 PM, said:
I just did some rough number crunching, and without changing anything but the scale and the maximum print area of my printer, I can make it roughly 18 inches tall.
It is already in pieces so I just tested with the biggest part (the torso) and worked out the rest of the scaling.
That said it would probably take like 5 days of printing continuously at that size and roughly a kilogram of Plastic. It estimates 15 hours for the torso alone.
Wow. 18 inch atlas would be incredible. Your printer is quite the machine to output that. I checked out some 3d printers and I was eyeing the cubify. The print volume is big on that too. I hope to see you try to enlarge the atlas or other mech.
Ck
#184
Posted 21 July 2013 - 10:27 AM
carl kerensky, on 21 July 2013 - 06:45 AM, said:
Ck
I dont think he means the printarea alone would allow an 18 inch Atlas to be made in a single go. i think what he means is that you can print the pieces at such a scale that when the mech is assembled it would be 18 inches. so the print area is still relatibly small.
#185
Posted 21 July 2013 - 12:34 PM
I can't say I'd recommend the Cubify though, from the research I've done before purchasing my printer. Where it may look like one of the more mainstream models out there, they make you register and activate your product before using it for the first time. (the start of 3d printing DRM). They overcharge you for proprietary cartridges of filament that you need to buy from them. (printer ink gouging) not to mention limiting your choice of printable material. You can get woods, nylons, flexible stuff now. They have closed software and hardware, and to top it off they sued formlabs on their kickstart after funding went through. All very anti-competitive anti-consumer shenanigans for a technology so empowering. There are dozens of better choices out there IMO.
I'm not really versed in the whole scaling system as I don't own any mini's myself. But I did look up an 1:60 atlas and it sits roughly 10" high so I guess it's totally possible. The good thing about 3d printers is you just type in a number to scale to the proper size.
#186
Posted 21 July 2013 - 01:27 PM
#187
Posted 21 July 2013 - 06:43 PM
Valcrow, on 21 July 2013 - 12:34 PM, said:
I can't say I'd recommend the Cubify though, from the research I've done before purchasing my printer. Where it may look like one of the more mainstream models out there, they make you register and activate your product before using it for the first time. (the start of 3d printing DRM). They overcharge you for proprietary cartridges of filament that you need to buy from them. (printer ink gouging) not to mention limiting your choice of printable material. You can get woods, nylons, flexible stuff now. They have closed software and hardware, and to top it off they sued formlabs on their kickstart after funding went through. All very anti-competitive anti-consumer shenanigans for a technology so empowering. There are dozens of better choices out there IMO.
I'm not really versed in the whole scaling system as I don't own any mini's myself. But I did look up an 1:60 atlas and it sits roughly 10" high so I guess it's totally possible. The good thing about 3d printers is you just type in a number to scale to the proper size.
Thanks so much for the heads up on the cubify. I will avoid them like the plague. As far as the large atlas I assumed you would have to print them by pieces in order to get that size. Heck your 3d printer seems to do the job quite well. I will look into that one.
Ck
#189
Posted 23 July 2013 - 05:00 PM
#190
Posted 24 July 2013 - 06:19 AM
#191
Posted 24 July 2013 - 06:56 AM
get talking to microsoft! where are my timber wolves and atlases now?
#192
Posted 02 August 2013 - 11:37 AM
Valcrow, on 29 May 2013 - 03:22 PM, said:
So I finally finished my 3D printed Atlas and got around to getting proper pictures done by Telkin Vaga over at triggerhappyphotography.
Roughly 30 parts (excluding pegs), Freely Stands at 6" tall, most of the major joints are movable. Printed in Silver PLA. The biggest challenge was keeping the integrity of the atlas design while making the joints operational in a physical model, coupled with the limitations of FDM printing.
The side guns are detachable, and as much of it was designed to snap together to reduce the use of glue. In hindsight, I should have designed everything to be snap fit... There's only 2 glued part from the upper torso up.
Anyways, you came here for pictures! so here they are!
Enjoy!
Version2 (2013 06 25) with balljointed legs
Version1
Head printed at 75 micron layer as opposed to 150 for the rest. shines a bit differently.. kinda like hair.
Nickle for scale.
BAP for scale. If you don't know how big a Canadian nickle is.
So when are you going to the marketing team of PGI to work and we can expect this to role out as merchandising? I'm serious.
#193
Posted 02 August 2013 - 01:40 PM
and poster:
Everyone knows kittens and puppies are the key to internet marketing. Not fish!
Anyways. PGI hire me. I shall make my beagle famous.
#194
Posted 02 August 2013 - 04:24 PM
Edited by SEEKER 1, 02 August 2013 - 04:26 PM.
#195
Posted 06 August 2013 - 08:25 PM
Edited by ShadowLiger, 06 August 2013 - 08:26 PM.
#196
Posted 07 August 2013 - 09:32 AM
I have a castle/birdhouse thing on thingeverse though.
Edited by Valcrow, 07 August 2013 - 09:32 AM.
#197
Posted 08 August 2013 - 10:28 PM
I haven't painted anything since.... well I can't remember the last time... but here are some pics with some 10 year old still liquid citidel paints, generic acrylic paints, and rust protection black spraypaint as a primer. Appropriately In Noob green(tan) colour scheme.
The spraypaint sticks well to the PLA, the paint doesn't stick well to the primer... Sealed with latex clearcoat.
Edited by Valcrow, 09 August 2013 - 01:28 AM.
#198
Posted 10 August 2013 - 08:42 PM
#199
Posted 12 August 2013 - 07:31 AM
I really liked it, in the "raw" format. But having seen the paint job, just makes look so much better. The chosen scheme gives it a really nice weathered look.
#200
Posted 12 August 2013 - 12:23 PM
Looks fantastic right now though! I would kill to get myself some MWO mech models!
3 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 3 guests, 0 anonymous users