AWESOME 3D Printed STEEL!

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  • čas přidán 18. 04. 2024
  • WORLDS FIRST Metal 3D Printed LEGO Lightsaber! I loved @MattDenton and his LEGO lightsaber build, so I made one OUT OF 3D PRINTED TITANIUM, STEEL, AND ALUMINUM!
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 122

  • @leeslegacywoodworking5405
    @leeslegacywoodworking5405 Před 29 dny +32

    Whenever you tap metal, ALWAYS use some sort of cutting oil. Also, if you are tapping a small hole, don’t use a drill. Do it by hand and put your work piece in a vise.

    • @jordankiser8435
      @jordankiser8435 Před 21 dnem +1

      Tap + Drill = Sadness, their are option for hand tapping drills with special chucks on them though. Good ones run you close to $500

  • @AbAb-th5qe
    @AbAb-th5qe Před 29 dny +30

    So you've assembled your own lightsaber. That's the last step to becoming a Jedi

    • @chipcode5538
      @chipcode5538 Před 29 dny

      You mean the first step, still some time training ahead

    • @AbAb-th5qe
      @AbAb-th5qe Před 29 dny +2

      @@chipcode5538 No you're wrong. Definitely the last thing. In canon they would train with other things. A lightsaber requires the ability to feel the force to balance the crystals inside otherwise it blows up on first activation. So it's like parachutists packing their own parachute. DK taught me well :)

  • @cybair9341
    @cybair9341 Před 29 dny +19

    It would have been interesting to know how much it cost for those metal parts.

  • @Festivejelly
    @Festivejelly Před 24 dny +2

    Imagine when metal 3d printers are sub 10k. Its going to be amazing for small businesses. I have a small business where I need to machine a lot of parts myself and its so time consuming for the more complicated ones. Being able to metal 3d print the majority would be a huge game changer.

  • @ScytheNoire
    @ScytheNoire Před 29 dny +14

    I have never used a tap in a drill. It's alwyas been by hand, and WITH tapping/cutting oil, lots of oil.
    At lesat that was the way I was trained decades ago by machinists.

    • @captainheat2314
      @captainheat2314 Před 29 dny +1

      You can use a drill if you use the clutch and once it binds go back and forward till you are done

  • @rossk7927
    @rossk7927 Před 24 dny +1

    Tapping tip - go up a drill size! The tapping drill size specified is never going to work out in metal (even aluminum) when tapping by hand. You simply cannot keep the tap aligned with the hole, it will bind and break every time. Also it makes tapping a lot easier. And use a cutting fluid, WD40 works well for aluminum and can work in a pinch for other metals. Using anything is better than using nothing.

  • @AndrewWorkshop
    @AndrewWorkshop Před 27 dny +1

    Dude, you need cutting fluid or lard/shortening! Cool build!

  • @YourBuddyDinec
    @YourBuddyDinec Před 29 dny +2

    That will make a fine addition to your collection!

  • @Samert1598
    @Samert1598 Před 27 dny +1

    What filament printer do you recommend in the 250-300 dollar price range?

  • @MonkeyButlerLabs
    @MonkeyButlerLabs Před 29 dny

    Encouraging people to try, maybe fail, and keep trying.
    More people need to hear this.
    Thanks Joel.

  • @WillPower311
    @WillPower311 Před 29 dny +2

    Great Video! A Vice to hold the project would change your life!

  • @dgermain001
    @dgermain001 Před 12 dny

    Improvement suggestion, add a motion detector and realtime light saber moving noise!

  • @BrunodeSouzaLino
    @BrunodeSouzaLino Před 29 dny +1

    Your mistakes with the taps can be boiled down to one simple thing: you didn't use any cutting oil. You should never tap dry, especially on high speed steel. That will cause the metal to heat up and work harden. Once it work hardens, that tap will snap.

  • @ryanvandewater3380
    @ryanvandewater3380 Před 23 dny

    Bacon grease and beeswax are the 2 most popular tapping "fluids" in our shop. And if you happen to break a tap in an aluminum part, just send it out for anodizing, it will come back without a tap in it. But in every case, alignment is key, a misaligned tap will almost always break.

  • @daviddiegel1239
    @daviddiegel1239 Před 28 dny +1

    A few tips and suggestions: 1. As leeslegacy stated always place your metal part in a vice or secure it to a base for taping and always use oil to do taping by hand. 2. for electronics inside metal objects you can add a non conductive material to the inside... coat the inner surface with a non conductive dip or paint on the inside. Or print an inner sleeve and subtract the thickness from the metal substrate. This can also be used to screw into rather than tapping. Effectively your outer metal part become more decorative by making that inner protective structure become the attachment point and the insulator.

    • @harvey66616
      @harvey66616 Před 21 dnem

      _"Or print an inner sleeve and subtract the thickness from the metal substrate"_ -- yeah, IMHO that's the way to go. I don't know if that would've fit the basic framework of the project here, i.e. still having some of the saber printed in plastic, but since the visible, touchable part would still be metal I'd think it'd still be within the scope of the idea.
      Dip or paint is just going to reduce clearances anyway, so really should adjust the model printed in metal anyway, and if you're going to do that, might as well just go ahead and print a proper sleeve instead of dealing with messy dip or paint.

  • @nihlil
    @nihlil Před 25 dny

    that hand needs to be wall mounted with the lightsaber constantly lit... IN BLUE !!!

  • @YouBetterCallSaul
    @YouBetterCallSaul Před 22 dny

    Tapmagic is your friend…have some ready to go for future projects 👌🏼

  • @75keg75
    @75keg75 Před 29 dny +2

    Could you do a clamshell 3d printed tubular box that you pack with the wires, close up then slide it super easily into the metal tube?

  • @pHuzi0n
    @pHuzi0n Před 20 dny

    If you're ever going to drill or tap metal again, put it in a sturdy vise. For tapping, either use a hand tap being careful to apply even force (lateral force on the bit will snap it) or a drill press/cnc mill. As others have said, also use some lubricant, especially for hard metal like the high speed steel you were doing.
    Cutting aluminum and wood will let you get away with a lot that hard metals will not.

  • @kurtlindner
    @kurtlindner Před 29 dny +1

    Great project.
    Were I to attempt this one, I think I'd try slushing paint or tool dip (possibly to thick) in the cavity to combat shorting.

  • @2robotguy
    @2robotguy Před 23 dny

    What metal 3D printers were these parts printed on? Looks like Binderjet but has some porosity and surface roughness

  • @cohnodonnell9747
    @cohnodonnell9747 Před 24 dny

    "quite sad", I've been "quite sad" too, two times today in fact, printing with ASA. It's printing quite fine now, so I'm "quite happy". Great job, love the build!

  • @MattDenton
    @MattDenton Před 29 dny

    Awesome! 🙌😊

  • @poodlescone9700
    @poodlescone9700 Před 29 dny +2

    So what was the cost to do the lightsaber in metal?

  • @ThingsYouMightLike
    @ThingsYouMightLike Před 29 dny +1

    :47 Thank you for sneaking in a Napoleon Dynamite quote. It did not go unnoticed.

  • @PCBWay
    @PCBWay Před 26 dny

    That's the LIGHTSABER!! 🥳🥳🥳

  • @joshuamccracken8994
    @joshuamccracken8994 Před 29 dny

    that looks a fun and challenging project thanks for sharing your journey!

    • @3DPrintingNerd
      @3DPrintingNerd  Před 29 dny

      It really was, but that's makes the result just so much better!

    • @joshuamccracken8994
      @joshuamccracken8994 Před 29 dny

      @@3DPrintingNerd Agreed, the satisfaction once it's complete is so great!

  • @azatgylychanov4022
    @azatgylychanov4022 Před 28 dny

    Greetings from Turkmenistan, Ashgabat. Thank you for interesting, educational and fun videos!

  • @thebestabathatabbaed
    @thebestabathatabbaed Před 29 dny

    im so happy that you made tha bobby duke arts refernce i started my youtube art journy on him
    eventuily got done to 3d printing
    thank you for doing all you do

  • @FranklyPeetoons
    @FranklyPeetoons Před 28 dny

    I is impressed and astounded

  • @Doogleraia
    @Doogleraia Před 29 dny +1

    Metal 3D printing seriously need to become as commonplace as bambu lab printers have become, or even more commonplace.

    • @3dprintedhardware
      @3dprintedhardware Před 25 dny

      That's the day my business and I are waiting for 😀👍

  • @oskarwallin8715
    @oskarwallin8715 Před 26 dny +2

    It woudl be interesting to see the price quotes on all these metal parts content creaters get for free from JLC :)

  • @semosesam
    @semosesam Před 14 dny

    Electrical tape might work short term, but it doesn't last. Kapton tape is what the entire electronics industry uses, strongly recommended for this application.

  • @thenextlayer
    @thenextlayer Před 28 dny

    Cool video man! But... PCBWay could've tapped those holes for you!

    • @3DPrintingNerd
      @3DPrintingNerd  Před 28 dny

      Yes they could have, heh. Oh dude, yes they could.

  • @craigschulz4944
    @craigschulz4944 Před 28 dny

    I like to use self-fusing silicone tape on electrical components whenever possible. It doesn't leave a sticky residue behind like standard electrical tape does.

  • @hanelyp1
    @hanelyp1 Před 29 dny +1

    Tool steel is not for novices. Aluminum is a lot easier for the machining steps. And can be anodized for colors.

  • @xgeko2
    @xgeko2 Před 29 dny +1

    you could use a clear conformal coating on those circuit boards to insulate them it will fit way better but also make it water proof.

    • @3DPrintingNerd
      @3DPrintingNerd  Před 29 dny +1

      I had thought about that, but maybe next time!

    • @moodyone99
      @moodyone99 Před 29 dny +1

      What about kapton tape? Thin and high temp.

  • @ImaginationToForm
    @ImaginationToForm Před 29 dny

    That must feel nice with the weight of it being in metal.

  • @3dprintedhardware
    @3dprintedhardware Před 25 dny

    When soldering tiny parts use solder paste and a heat gun, it's much easier 😉

  • @allaze-eroler
    @allaze-eroler Před 26 dny

    Why don’t you use a flexible pcb? Did you know that every hearing aids are made out of flexible pcb? It might be perfect for your project case! That aside, congrats on creating your first lightsaber!

  • @joescalon541
    @joescalon541 Před 29 dny

    Great project, I still haven’t made a saber.

  • @krollmond7544
    @krollmond7544 Před 29 dny +1

    Almost thought Metal 3D printing was more affordable to hobbyists

  • @TS_Mind_Swept
    @TS_Mind_Swept Před 23 dny

    I wonder if it would have been easier to print a small chassis to put all the electrical components on to insulate them from the metal 🤔 Kind of a pity it's so short though; bit more like a light dagger like this :p

  • @Patriot1790
    @Patriot1790 Před 24 dny

    1. It's tool steel, not "high speed steel"
    2. Tap by hand.
    3. Use cutting oil.
    4. Use a fluted tap so you don't have to back out the tap to clear the chips.

    • @3DPrintingNerd
      @3DPrintingNerd  Před 24 dny

      Well, shoot. What delineates tool steel from high speed?

    • @Patriot1790
      @Patriot1790 Před 24 dny

      High speed steel in used to make cutting tools. So it's technically tool steel, but not the same tool steel you would use for a parts like you have.

  • @lethaldonkey
    @lethaldonkey Před 29 dny

    Hey @3DPN I have a few bottle of Metal Instant adhesive Permabond that’s Aerospace grade for fighter jets if you need some.

  • @jellybeanpowder
    @jellybeanpowder Před 28 dny

    You're a winner

  • @KevOXO
    @KevOXO Před 28 dny

    I thought I had misheard when you said you were going to tap tool steel, maybe if it was something like pre-processed K1045, but good to see you had a happy smiling engineering outfit to help.
    Just love the enthusiasm you put into your clips.

  • @rcmaniac25
    @rcmaniac25 Před 18 dny

    Very cool. These kinds of projects are always ones that bring smiles to people's face. But the one thing that came to mind... "I put some electrical tape on the tube so I can wave it around like a maniac, I mean..."
    I had a teacher that showed up and proudly showed myself and classmates his new phone... a just released iPhone 3G. And with this new thing called the "App Store", he downloaded the most advanced apps that ever graced our mortal hands: the fart button and the light saber. Tap the touchscreen and "wooowow" and the light saber came on. Tap again "voooop". Double tap and the color changed. And if you swing it around... yea, that's the stuff. But unlike your electrical tape to hold the tube on, my teacher had nice leather case for his new phone. So he shook it around a bit to to make the light saber sounds when suddenly... the button gave. "WOOOWOWOWOWOOWWOwowowoowowowowo......." as the brand new iPhone that had people lined up around blocks to get... went flying off in a mathematically perfect ark across the room and into the cinder block wall the school was made of. So good option on the electrical tape to hold things secure.
    As for my teacher's phone, he was lucky. Not only were phones less fragile then, but it landed on some old circuit boards, producing a kindof trampoline that broke the phone's fall. Back in the case and no more wild shaking with the app. Fart app it is. Keeping WOOOOWOWOWOWOWO awesome.

  • @mr.e3065
    @mr.e3065 Před 29 dny

    The board needs an accelerometer, so when you swing it, it makes noise.

  • @tsalVlog
    @tsalVlog Před 24 dny

    I saw what you did there, channeling our dear friend Bobby.

  • @nihlil
    @nihlil Před 25 dny

    Also a great addon is a "Adafruit RP2040 Prop-Maker Feather met I2S Audio amplifier ", so this thing uses the start up sound of the lightsaber but! Also your movements make the lightsaber change it buzzingsounds. there's almost no soldering on the feather board. But Johnny why havent u build it yourself and share your knowledge on youtube, well i dont have a workspace and two printers in the living room, the qidi tech xmax3 makes a lot of noise and my health isnt... that great.

  • @ScytheNoire
    @ScytheNoire Před 29 dny

    I thought you were going to have a large 3D printed Lego Darth Vader to hold the Lego Lightsaber.
    It must be done. :)

  • @williamwilmes
    @williamwilmes Před 28 dny

    Do you need to 3D print a Lego Joel character to hold the Lego lightsaber????

  • @Gryfang451
    @Gryfang451 Před 27 dny

    This will be great for when you fight Lego Sith! Do not underestimate the power of the Lego Dark Side!

  • @Samert1598
    @Samert1598 Před 25 dny +1

    3-13

  • @Chaxlotl
    @Chaxlotl Před 29 dny +3

    if i had a 3d printer i could do so much

    • @hed420
      @hed420 Před 29 dny +1

      Same. I have a couple models that I made over 5 years ago that I would love to print.

    • @BassMaster.454
      @BassMaster.454 Před 29 dny +1

      I have a cheap one and I have no idea what I'm doing. It's not as simple as they make it look.

    • @willofthemaker
      @willofthemaker Před 29 dny +1

      Get one! There are a lot of affordable ones you can get to play with. There is a learning curve but basics to get you going aren't too bad. Then you can dive into details as you grow into it. Very rewarding and useful hobby!

    • @DonsArtnGames
      @DonsArtnGames Před 29 dny

      What's stopping you from having one?

    • @hed420
      @hed420 Před 29 dny

      @@DonsArtnGames Money or lack of.

  • @cnc-maker
    @cnc-maker Před 29 dny

    It looks like you forgot to use thread cutting oil, correct? 😮

  • @nintendolunchbox
    @nintendolunchbox Před 28 dny

    Bobby duke arts approves of you wanting Dat.

  • @lasersterling
    @lasersterling Před 29 dny

    So cool! See you later today! 😁

  • @thatkidrich
    @thatkidrich Před 29 dny

    You should have 3d Printed a plastic chassis to hold your components. If you are a interested in making more, you can get way easier boards to use.

    • @3DPrintingNerd
      @3DPrintingNerd  Před 29 dny +1

      I love this idea but there was no room for the chassis. If I do it again I’ll also have Matt change the pieces a bit :)

    • @thatkidrich
      @thatkidrich Před 29 dny

      @@3DPrintingNerd what was the ID of the part?

    • @vwpeginnis
      @vwpeginnis Před 26 dny

      Chassis can be as small as 7/8 in diameter ;)

    • @harvey66616
      @harvey66616 Před 21 dnem

      @@3DPrintingNerd IMHO, you'd want to adjust the metal part's inside space to accommodate a plastic liner/chassis that itself has the same size as the original project. Then the "no room for the chassis" is a non-problem.

  • @Duraltia
    @Duraltia Před 27 dny

    Had PCBWay 3D Print me some 1/16 scale Drive Sprockets ( 60x50mm ) out of Aluminium for my E-100 not too long ago.
    Cost me an arm and a leg ( incl Shipping and Tax ) for how little material it essentially was. That shit must have cost him his first born 🤔

  • @andy_warb
    @andy_warb Před 19 dny

    The electronics in this seem massively over complicated. You could have saved a lot of work by using an Adafruit Propmaker RP2040. It has audio and neopixel support, motion sensor and battery charging all on a single board.

  • @FlesHBoX
    @FlesHBoX Před 29 dny

    Fail! Nate didn't mention whether the bridgeport was clapped out. This is super important information we need!

  • @crschoen123
    @crschoen123 Před 29 dny +1

    I'm a novice at working with metal. But I've had better luck using a vise to hold the part when hand tapping and also using some oil as lubricant.

    • @3DPrintingNerd
      @3DPrintingNerd  Před 29 dny +2

      I had thought about the oil, but at a time it was too late :)

    • @ScytheNoire
      @ScytheNoire Před 29 dny +1

      This is the way I was trained by machinists. By hand, and with lots of tapping/cutting oil.

    • @crschoen123
      @crschoen123 Před 29 dny

      I've broken more taps learning than I care to admit. XD Thanks for the video. Metal 3D printing is awesome!

  • @DonsArtnGames
    @DonsArtnGames Před 29 dny

    You have done well, padawan.

  • @KevinDC5
    @KevinDC5 Před 12 dny

    if i had a nickel for every 1/4" tap ive broken, Id just buy PCBway! 😅

  • @AfelinenamedVJ
    @AfelinenamedVJ Před 23 dny

    Never heard of lube... huh?

  • @The_Privateer
    @The_Privateer Před 29 dny +3

    Missed opportunity to 3D print (plastic) an electronics 'sled' to load the electronics into the handle.

    • @charliebonavia4600
      @charliebonavia4600 Před 29 dny +1

      I was thinking the same thing. Or even a single layer plastic sleeve to insulate.

  • @Artwithbenji
    @Artwithbenji Před 29 dny

    Instead of black tape what about kapton tape. It's super thin and insulated.

    • @3DPrintingNerd
      @3DPrintingNerd  Před 29 dny

      HOLY COW I forgot about that!

    • @Artwithbenji
      @Artwithbenji Před 28 dny

      @@3DPrintingNerd it's whats used when making battery packs and some electronics. Just thought about it as you were making the electronics pack and thought 🤔 would this be better? It's also fairly strong 😀

  • @tracker831
    @tracker831 Před 29 dny

    BOBBY DUKE REFERENCE!

  • @diabeticjedi7951
    @diabeticjedi7951 Před 29 dny

    Talks about being a Jedi.... Uses a red blade....
    lol

  • @mariospanna8389
    @mariospanna8389 Před 29 dny +11

    using no oil when tapping...shame on you...shame!

  • @Suhlirvideos
    @Suhlirvideos Před 29 dny

    Cool project.

  • @michaelbraaten
    @michaelbraaten Před 25 dny

    lol Joel, you were soldering with no part holder and not using a smaller soldering iron and/or microscope. I mean I know those cost money so it wouldn’t be worth it just for that, but you basically had everything working against you for ease of soldering. Just sayin, you made it hard on yourself in that case lol

  • @Pcoakaloid
    @Pcoakaloid Před 25 dny

    You spelt aluminium wrong haha

  • @lgrfbs
    @lgrfbs Před 24 dny

    Thanks för the video.
    To bad it was 90% ad for PCBway an 10% Project.

  • @thegps7197
    @thegps7197 Před 29 dny

    Dude, where is the rest of your light saber. It looks alittle short.

  • @LarryDickmanGaming
    @LarryDickmanGaming Před 29 dny

    I would hate to step on that in the middle of the night.