Green coolant, stainless steel braided lines and those red and blue AN fittings for the radiators would be killer. Maybe a general silver color scheme for the main pc components to replicate engine components. I'd love to see someone incorporate pulleys and a belt although kinda dangerous spinning around on a desk haha
Yeah when I saw it coming together the first thing that came To mind was it looks like a VR6 engine and I came to the comment looking for other people who thought so
@@DJlegionuk I wish Ivan Miranda brought his huge DIY printer to the states, and we together printed parts for Colin and Linus, then drove them up to Canada.
ive been away from computers for a long time. my first computer was a AMD quad core with dual GT1080 SLi. like 2007 crysis drop was my last computer. recently ive just got back into the computer world and have been grinding your videos. over the past 3 weeks ive learned a sht ton from you and jays 2 cents, you have an extremely easy way to explain things and your humor is on par with my shenanigans. keep up the awesome work guys!!!
I just have to say that I admire Linus so much. Not only has he built his business from the ground up, but he's still really hands on, hasn't lost his passion, and employs a bunch of people who seem to be really comfortable around him. Just an all-around awesome person.
@@FlyPurpleHipp.o if that’s what full of oneself looks like, then more people need to be full of themselves. Maybe my bar is a little higher for that because of where I come from, but he really doesn’t seem that way.
Kind of looks like a V-6 engine block from the side view. Surprisingly super super cool and not at all as jank as I was expecting a 3D printed case to be.
The fact that they were advertising the ltt screwdriver since over a year and it actually went on sale like a month ago is a testament to Linus and lmg's team's perfectionism
Dude, that tip about heat setting the standoffs *chef's kiss*. I was just pressing them in using a screw pre-threaded through the brass insert standoffs and a tool to give me some leverage. This would have made the 3D engine I printed much easier to assemble.
@@stevendoesburg6555 been 3D printing for 6 months now and finally decided to play around with threaded inserts. I messed up like 5 of them until I consulted UA-cam and every tutorial said exactly that. now i get every insert perfectly flush every time lol.
A prusa i3 mk3 is a good introduction to 3d printing, however if you are completely new to assembling technology, I believe they sell a kit that is more premade than the base kit (obviously more expensive)
@@wearr_ The closest I'd done before assembling my mk3s+ kit is building and repairing desktop and laptop computers. Building took a while, about 5 nights of work, but the instructions included and comments online are very helpful. To get to my point, I think the kit is a better option for someone new to 3D printing, that way they will know how everything works and when something inevitably goes wrong (a perfect printer does not exist) or needs to be maintained, the task is significantly less daunting.
I watched this video the day it came out. Then 3 months later I got my first 3D printer. Became absolutely obsessed printing 24/7 upgrading it nonstop learning about everything 3D printing and now I'm finally rewatching this video and have an entirely new outlook on this now lol. That E3D machine is wild but looks like a major headache lmao.
I love seeing 3d prints that are fundamentally things that would be entirely impractical to do in older ways. Like don't just do the same thing but printed, take advantage of the new options that printing enables to explore the ideas
Hey Linus, give Thermochromatic filament a try. It changes color as it heats up, I placed some thermochromatic pla objects inside my computer case so I can watch them change from orange during normal use to yellow under heaving gaming load.
Wtf is the "someone says heck" thingy with bots these days? I've seen it over hundred times in the past month. If it's a joke then I swear I never laughed in any of these hundred times; Like if you're gonna be a bot, then just act like a bot and don't be cringe wth.
IMA OG Network Admin, serious system builder since 1994. I am an auto tech and HP engine building for 40 yrs. You need to configure the dual radiators using one for the GPU and CPU. I cant believe y'all didnt catch that. This is cool. I bought a 3d printer 3 years ago and just started using it since i'm snowed in. I never had time for the learning curve, but now I am teaching myself CAD and will prolly start printing parts for locals, until some corporation starts doing it.
They're putting the workshop to good use. When they built it years ago, I would have questioned why LMG would want to expand that much. Now I see why they did it.
@@Daepilin i am sure Linus compensated him well for working weekends, but also most people working at LTT are huge nerds and actually enjoy tinkering with stuff like this on their weekends
@@originalkhawk I do too ;) regularly spend hours taking my ender 3 v2 apart, modding it and putting it back together. But it's different if it's yours to use afterwards or if you do it for the company.
This is so cute to see after years of 3D printing and designing several computer cases. It's so much easier than most people realize. Outstanding case choice to print.
@@blitzwing1 I also don't know why. it is the same for drones. you need to be like a company or organization and request a special permission to use them
@@katech6020 Is that true today? I thought they were on permit basis initially but then 3D printers were legalised without limitations; drones still need a registration and a permit. But i'm not from the region, just the things i heard, i might not be up to date.
If I may make a suggestion, this is the perfect time of year to pickup glue sticks at your local discount store, which you could use to temporarily attach the standoffs while you place the motherboard. This works since you're not concenred about grounding to the case. I really like this case.
He hasn't seen the talent my foot has for opening doors while carrying heavy objects. Well as long as the doorknob uses the "Handle" style and not the "Ball" style. In the vocational computer repair class I was in last decade I was carrying a few Dell Opti-plex slim desktops and a classmate that was helping me asked if I needed help opening the door so while carrying 3 computers swung my leg up and proceeded to use my foot to turn the door handle. My friend then says "Ok, never mind".
That turned out pretty damn cool, good job guys. Would love to see a bunch more 3d printed case builds going forward. Maybe this will become a real category.
Ideally you don't want to accidentally advertise/show another brand that hasn't agreed to partake in your production. If their product is shown and one party ends up with bad faith, they could request the entire video to be pulled down until the issue is dealt with.
@@isaiahwalking No. Its more like against terms of agreement. Lets say u got sponsored by a food company. Then you show the same product but a different brand. Maybe the company that sponsors you dont want you to show their competitions product.
Idea for locating the spacers for the motherboard without the two man juggling act - place short cut off matchsticks in the brass recievers, thread the spacers onto the matchsticks, drop the motherboard on and the matches will go through the mounting holes, keeping the spacers at least roughly in place. Then simply remove the matchsticks as you go, replacing each in turn with a screw. Job done, and a bit easier than working upside down.
The back of the case is open so if you get one corner in on its own and get the other corner in, you would be able to just slide the spacer in and screw it for the rest of them.
just use glue, Elmer's glue would work great and is easy to remove + its pva so its not like its conductive or anything that would have the possibility of screwing up your pc
@@scandalingshadows Its been a very, very long time since I used PVA glue, but doesnt that take hours to dry properly? And I've never rated the stuf for anything besides paper and cardboard, porous materials
The only thing that will really prevent it will be the cost, as an automated manufacturing process in mass quantity will always beat 3D printing in the cost of raw materials. However, there might very well be a market for individual unique designs that will never have the sales numbers for a manufacturer to justify the up-front cost.
@@IvanSal778 rockets had a lot of room to be simplified down to something printable, but for cars it's unlikely to ever make sense on a meaningful scale. There is one company making hypercars with predominantly 3D printed parts though, allows for some uniquely shaped parts
just use some hotglue to keep the spacers in place.. comes off easy so wont damage the board or plastic parts.. No need to do acrobatics to put the board on..
@@JK-ul3py The prusa is a prime example. When doing upgrades, you can opt for the package with or without the plastic parts so you can save a little and print them yourself
That "Motion System" sounds like the kind of thing someone could make a small business out of.. Charge a modest overhead for folks to order prints with more quality/features than a home printer can. That case is freaking dope, too.
It isn't "all that" expensive (in the context of what it is), lower priced than an Up Box2 from tiertime... superior in probably every way except for absolute out of the box generic plug and play. I have had a bunch of 3d Printers for years, and do interesting stuff from time to time, though more of a sideline than a real "driven" business. The average "that's so cool" person wants too much for too little, hardly worth bothering with - one needs clients who value time, even a lot of "professional wannabe clients" are little more than tyre kickers.. - I do need to upgrade my main FFD printer to hardware with a bit more automation built in.
The effect at 4:30 can also be reached with printers that can be paused and where you can "hot switch" filament....which is basically all of them these days.
Finally a good pc build for 2021. Just like in the good old days 🙂 Thanks linus for bringing some good memories on pc building that we missed nowadays ☺️
@@Elemental-IT One of us isn't understanding something about the setup. There are no holes that go all the way through the frame (the screws go into threaded inserts); reversing the board puts the screws in backwards, getting the stuff on the front of the board in the way without doing anything about the standoffs; Unless I'm doing a terrible job of understanding what you have in mind, I don't see how what you suggested helps at all.
@@benjaminmiddaugh2729 You can just use masking tape to hold the screws in the PCB while you install the spacers and the enclosure on it. You can just tilt the enclosure somewhat so the spacers don't slide off the screws, and the layer line texture on the spacers helps keep them in place, and marry the two together, not too difficult at all.
@@MrJeepney123 I started with the hotend tempreture in the beginning, because I had no experience, with 220 C, now I picked up the speed while welding and I use around 300 C. In the beginning, start with around 200C and you can increse it as you get faster at welding ;)
I have one, its not a dark art. Just tons of tinkering and troubleshooting but the amount of knowledge online makes it super easy if youre okay at google-fu
@@legoyoda2773 I'd love to see the record of someone reasonably hardware/software saavy, but not a 3D printing savvy person, keeping track of how much time they spend screwing around with settings, slicers, failed prints and cleanup, printer fixes/upgrades/etc, per hour of final print time. And then keep data over time, where they use the thing for at least 10 'final print' hours a month or so. Presumably the 'screwing around' percentage goes down, but how much? Does it spike every time they use a new material type? How much? Etc. I'd love to get into it, but it seems like a huge timesink for the level of benefit from having it.
@@davidskidmore3442 honestly its not too bad at first, before getting into it tho Id suggest having ideas of what youd want to use it for. Also being able to 3d cad model is MASSIVE
When you started I thought it was an ugly case but after watching you guys build it, l love it. It’s definitely got a weird look but it grows on you quickly. Thanks for sharing
You guys HAVE to make a video showing off the full capabilities of that motion system. And also some more footage of setting it up/tips & tricks. Sincerely, A hobbyist 3d printer that would freaking love one of those things
i would have just glued the spacers in with a mild glue like the purple glue stick i use on my glass print bed... that stuff is pretty mild and is easy to remove later but should be sticky enough to keep it in place to get the screws in...
Just got done watching the bioluminescent dye pc build, then followed up with this one. Now we need a 3D printed case that incorporates the coolant loop into the frame of the case that is partly clear/translucent combined with the bioluminescent dye.
3D printing things that are water tight is outside the realm of consumer, or even enthusiast printers. Even the more readily available commercial and industrial printers would be bad at it. The best solution would probably be incorporating tubing channels in the case so they become part of the case, even if they aren't initially.
With 2 radiators you could have done pump -> gpu -> radiator -> cpu -> radiator -> pump, mainly because then you would get 2 nicely cooled parts other than prioritizing cooling one first then the next
Just what I've been waiting for :). For this project, I recomend a volcano with a 0.6 or even 0.8mm nozzle and 0.3 to 0.6 layer hight. Much faster and the layers look very clean on big parts like this.
Great stuff! Would recommend placing and aligning the screw post spacers needed prior to the mainboard install and dab them with super glue to save on those acrobatic installation antics... good giggle viewing though it has to be said!
Would like a longer section at the end to show off the build. With more panning / revolving close ups, maybe in some dimmer lighting to show of the lighting. Really show me how the result turned out, the rough corners and all. Maybe I want to build this.
You could buy an ender 3 pro for like 200 bucks and just give the case some cuts. To get around the weaknesses for gluing you could easily add some printed connectors in something like meshmixer (its default connector, no extra designing needed) that from experience, are pretty strong and better than glue. Linus has the tech but imo they aren't really that experienced in the 3D printing side of things. There are a lot of ways they could have done it easily and faster with those already expensive prusas if someone took the time to just do some plane cuts and booleans
@@bigprojects2560 Or you could get an Ender 5 Plus, it's larg enough but waaaay cheaper (I think around 500€?). Or if you're into tinkering, just build your own machine in your prefered size, there are a lot of templates for amazing printers you just have to build (my favourite design is the Hevort, but its pretty much overkill in most aspects and almost exclusively made for speed)
3d printing is super accessible now, if you chopped it up you can get it printed. I live in a small town and our public library has 3d printers. They didn't have to use a 10k printer, they just wanted too lol
I like to see builds like this but for my personal preferences the most important things (in order) with a case are 1. Dust control 2. Airflow 3. Noise
@@Prophes0rWell, pretty much every part of that case is designed around 3d printing so you wouldn't be doing that with sheets of anything. Specially not with hand tools.
AISURU.TOKYO/machiko?[Shake-body🤗] (◍•ᴗ•◍)✧。*18 years and over 🍑❤ UA-cam: This is fine Someone: Says "heck" UA-cam: Be gone #однако #я #люблю #таких #рыбаков #Интересно #забавно #девушка #смешная #垃圾
@@manicdan481 it's a case i designed to hold the motherboard and screen from an old laptop and mount it to a Vesa arm. This will run octoprint for both my printers.
I noticed that aswell then I rewatched that part in 0.25x speed and noticed 2 more things, 1: he sounds extremely tired but thats probably normal for 0.25x speed, and 2: at 19:00 he looks like he's about to snap XD
1:07 hey Linus, when you are merging 3D printed parts, DON'T GLUE! Use a soldering iron to "weld" the plastic pieces together, then sand and paint it. It's totally seemless and super structurally sound! (It still takes a long time though lol)
@@ubberJakerz that only works on thin parts. If you have anything thicker than 10mm or so you end up only having the surface bonded. Similar to a concept in welding where you get drastically weaker joints with poor weld penetration. Most plastics don't melt together that great with a soldering iron either.
@@zakm0n Thickness isn't really a limiting factor. Look up Frankly Built. He has a video on fusing huge swords. He penetrates deep into parts and fills the holes with extra filament.
useful idea: use longer heat inserts to go through the spacers and the frame. 😁 This is a great video, and a testamet to sanjay and company and the legacy while being VERY much LMG! thank you
Thumbnail is awesome. If you guys ever want to do a just-for-fun thermal test or case review, you know where to find us!
does this case have goodenough cooling for you Steve
In the same fashion Paul reviewed your desk mat? Oh please make it happen
I'm pretty sure this one has enough airflow, even without you telling me. Can't be 100% certain tho
Do it
That's the neat part. You can just download and print your own case.
Can we just appreciate how they actually cooked an egg on the 'Motion-System' and made it look like side note?
I'm sure the guys that leant this to them are shaking their heads
@@tyleyden8695 E3D made a video about making complete breakfast with it. Not sure if the eggs footage were from LTT or E3D tbh.
@@the_tiny_Rambo oh I see
Since you can use this machine to make PCBs, we are one step closer to being able to download RAM.
Imagine 3D printers being accurate down to just a few nanometers. That’s the day I finally buy one!
@@blankbackgroundimage457 nah man, at least not for eternity, they will drop in price eventually
Amen
@@blankbackgroundimage457 I’ll amend my statement to: That’s the day I’ll finally really REALLY want one!
ill be waiting for that
It's amazing how far 3D printing has evolved since it became a "thing." Consistently blown away
I love how the radiators on top look like engine valve head covers. Looks sick.
I was thinking the same
Green coolant, stainless steel braided lines and those red and blue AN fittings for the radiators would be killer. Maybe a general silver color scheme for the main pc components to replicate engine components. I'd love to see someone incorporate pulleys and a belt although kinda dangerous spinning around on a desk haha
That’s what I thought too! It’s amazing!
And the whole thing like a V8 engine.
Yeah when I saw it coming together the first thing that came To mind was it looks like a VR6 engine and I came to the comment looking for other people who thought so
I love how this whole build has this “engine block” look & feel to it
looks like a v engine
@@kenziebalbes3054 so like 90% of engines
What I was here to say 🙏
How fast is your PC? It's a straight 6.
@@YungEagle3k nah
Colin is a wizard.
it's a shame you don't have that massive printer that filled your garage, you could have printed in a single part.
Would be cool, thought it wouldn't really make sense structurally
@@DJlegionuk @ivan Miranda does have one
@@DJlegionuk I wish Ivan Miranda brought his huge DIY printer to the states, and we together printed parts for Colin and Linus, then drove them up to Canada.
Are you saying he should be burned at the stake?
The 49% humidity in the filament enclosure is like nails on a chalkboard ;p
Heard those nails all the way over here, good grief, 49%, could almost see condensation dripping off the spools!
maybe they use one of those filament types that encourage humidity (probably not)
@@caeryllium Two weeks ago is criminal
@@armarkour what?
ohhh is it because of how late i replied lol i see that now
Linus: "I've got an idea."
Colin: "Oh no."
Leonardus: i need linus!
linus: i need hits for my UA-cam job!
you mean colin from "this does not compute"?
collin ?
Linus: "I've got an idea."
Colin: "Oh no."
_Yeah, this is why you should only ever work for yourself_ 😑
Next up: print a heat sink, slap on some thermal compound, and see how long you can benchmark before the heatsink becomes one with the CPU.
Major Hardware did something similar where he printed a rad with `copper` resign
Red Shirt Jeff... is that you?
Definitely him, the blower isn't working yet Ugh!
PLA cooling >>> conventional water-cooling
Red Shirt Jeff in command of the comments today?
Colin - "I misplaced it"
Reality - It's in Colin's home gaming rig.
No doubts 😆😆
Shhhhh
His shirt is a Discord shirt, right?
That was my first thought haha
I mean if I had the choice between the two...
10900k out performs the 11900k half the time plus it has more cores...
ive been away from computers for a long time. my first computer was a AMD quad core with dual GT1080 SLi. like 2007 crysis drop was my last computer. recently ive just got back into the computer world and have been grinding your videos. over the past 3 weeks ive learned a sht ton from you and jays 2 cents, you have an extremely easy way to explain things and your humor is on par with my shenanigans. keep up the awesome work guys!!!
I just have to say that I admire Linus so much. Not only has he built his business from the ground up, but he's still really hands on, hasn't lost his passion, and employs a bunch of people who seem to be really comfortable around him. Just an all-around awesome person.
Emphasis on "seem" 😂
Linus is full of himself.
He actually considered retiring multiple times.
@@FlyPurpleHipp.o if that’s what full of oneself looks like, then more people need to be full of themselves. Maybe my bar is a little higher for that because of where I come from, but he really doesn’t seem that way.
@@louisrobitaille5810 all we have are what we see here and what others have said, or not said, about him.
Kind of looks like a V-6 engine block from the side view. Surprisingly super super cool and not at all as jank as I was expecting a 3D printed case to be.
Yeah, like a vw vr6. Very narrow angled motor, the inline v.
I want it
Funny considering the printer runs a v6 hotend.
I mean if you've never seen a ICE then sure .. it's like a V6... I mean it doesn't and that is the dumbest thing to say.
@@robsixtyfour9204 I mean it doesn't and inline is straight .. V6 and straight 6 are different types... But okay.
We need more 3D printed content. Like a 3D printed PC accessory showcase, where you show off a dozen 3D printed PC mods and gadgets.
My favorite is the custom GPU supports.
This is a brilliant idea
Definitely this. But as someone who has done some of the R&D on that I might be a bit biased.
A 3d printing additive\cnc channel would be cool
The fact that they were advertising the ltt screwdriver since over a year and it actually went on sale like a month ago is a testament to Linus and lmg's team's perfectionism
lol this didnt age well
@@liamkeech8558lmao yeah
LTT needs more 3D printing. The three Ds are "drops," "dongles," and "data"
Dude, that tip about heat setting the standoffs *chef's kiss*. I was just pressing them in using a screw pre-threaded through the brass insert standoffs and a tool to give me some leverage. This would have made the 3D engine I printed much easier to assemble.
Use a flat piece of metal to press down on the insert after removing the soldering iron to easily get it flush with the surface of the print.
@@stevendoesburg6555 been 3D printing for 6 months now and finally decided to play around with threaded inserts. I messed up like 5 of them until I consulted UA-cam and every tutorial said exactly that. now i get every insert perfectly flush every time lol.
This is the perfect case for a sim racer. I’m going to blow this up in the sim rig community. It literally looks like an engine.
That's what I thought haha, was teh first thing that came to mind, looks like an engine block.
@@XBullitt16X thats what i thought when i saw the v2
Same was thinking v
You do need to probably change the design a bit so most printers can print all the parts
Hi fo you know Richard
Those printers (not the tool changer) look like a very good printer to buy if you are getting into 3d printing
yeah seems like the only thing that needs an upgrade down the line is the nozzle
Yep, Prusas are well known to be the GOATS in terms of price to performance ratio and ease of use.
I built my mk3s+ at the end of october and I've absolutely loved it
A prusa i3 mk3 is a good introduction to 3d printing, however if you are completely new to assembling technology, I believe they sell a kit that is more premade than the base kit (obviously more expensive)
@@wearr_ The closest I'd done before assembling my mk3s+ kit is building and repairing desktop and laptop computers. Building took a while, about 5 nights of work, but the instructions included and comments online are very helpful. To get to my point, I think the kit is a better option for someone new to 3D printing, that way they will know how everything works and when something inevitably goes wrong (a perfect printer does not exist) or needs to be maintained, the task is significantly less daunting.
I love that every time Linus makes a mistake, no matter how small, whoever is in the video with him always assumes the worst.
they just attract freaks here......
I love Colin's videos cos the amount of dedicated care and effort he puts into the prep work always shines through. This was fun to watch!
I watched this video the day it came out. Then 3 months later I got my first 3D printer. Became absolutely obsessed printing 24/7 upgrading it nonstop learning about everything 3D printing and now I'm finally rewatching this video and have an entirely new outlook on this now lol. That E3D machine is wild but looks like a major headache lmao.
As many as six major headaches, I think. The idea of dialing in all those toolheads is giving me a panic attack.
love the blurred discord shirt - gotta avoid copyright infringement
It's so distracting. He should just have merch required for production
I hope they sell it on the ltt store soon
Linus: "Here's what we're going to do, Colin."
Colin: "Okay."
Linus: "I've got an idea."
Colin: "Oh no."
8:14 if anyone missed it
_* Infinite Seriousness_
Linus: "Anyway."
What planet are you on
Linus bla bla
Colin bla bla
Switch phone off and get outside there’s a world to discover
The true mark of someone who works with Linus.
I love seeing 3d prints that are fundamentally things that would be entirely impractical to do in older ways. Like don't just do the same thing but printed, take advantage of the new options that printing enables to explore the ideas
So what was blurred out on his shirt?
Hey Linus, give Thermochromatic filament a try. It changes color as it heats up, I placed some thermochromatic pla objects inside my computer case so I can watch them change from orange during normal use to yellow under heaving gaming load.
That actually sounds really cool, you got any videos or pictures of that somewhere?
@@chilelekochileya5676 I can take some today
Every day we stray closer to finally downloading more RAM
Sheeesh
Came here for this comment
bro half the replies are bots
every comment but this, is a bot
Wtf is the "someone says heck" thingy with bots these days? I've seen it over hundred times in the past month. If it's a joke then I swear I never laughed in any of these hundred times; Like if you're gonna be a bot, then just act like a bot and don't be cringe wth.
That's freakin' sweet! Also, I don't know if this is intentional, but I love how the radiator fans almost give off an engine block vibe.
Must be intentional. When it first appeared my brain instinctively said "Hey, that's a car engine"
I love the radiator design too, look like the radiator on the back of the locomotive
IMA OG Network Admin, serious system builder since 1994. I am an auto tech and HP engine building for 40 yrs.
You need to configure the dual radiators using one for the GPU and CPU. I cant believe y'all didnt catch that.
This is cool. I bought a 3d printer 3 years ago and just started using it since i'm snowed in. I never had time for the learning curve, but now I am teaching myself CAD and will prolly start printing parts for locals, until some corporation starts doing it.
They're putting the workshop to good use.
When they built it years ago, I would have questioned why LMG would want to expand that much. Now I see why they did it.
9:00 I love how Linus created the worst possible way of just screwing in a motherboard with spacers.
It was going too well and he needed to Linus it up a bit.
They just forgot that superglue existed, I think. 🤷♂️
@@marko247 Or plastic glue
That was painful to watch lol
or 3d printing spacers that friction fit on the screws
Colin wearing an iFixit t-shirt: No problem
...switches t-shirt for the sum up at the end to a Discord one: Blur it! 😂
question is... why?
I'm guessing it was advertising a specific discord channel?
@@kwanmona7986 This feels like spam, but it's oddly relevant
Bruh you got some scams going on in the reply’s
still the question why...
I put metal inserts on many 3D prints i do, it's SO satisfying putting them and makes the build much more solid !
3 full weekends, huh? Colin really must love his job. Kudos Colin!
Yeah, I hope he got payed extra for working his weekends...
@@Daepilin i am sure Linus compensated him well for working weekends, but also most people working at LTT are huge nerds and actually enjoy tinkering with stuff like this on their weekends
@@originalkhawk I do too ;) regularly spend hours taking my ender 3 v2 apart, modding it and putting it back together.
But it's different if it's yours to use afterwards or if you do it for the company.
This is so cute to see after years of 3D printing and designing several computer cases. It's so much easier than most people realize. Outstanding case choice to print.
sadly 3D printers are illegal in my country
@@blitzwing1 I also don't know why. it is the same for drones. you need to be like a company or organization and request a special permission to use them
@@katech6020 what country are you in?
@@Bajicoy Morocco
@@katech6020 Is that true today? I thought they were on permit basis initially but then 3D printers were legalised without limitations; drones still need a registration and a permit. But i'm not from the region, just the things i heard, i might not be up to date.
I love how they blurred out the shirt but it's still obviously a Discord shirt...
the first letter of the text was an S
Now cats out the bag man. We were not supposed to know that. I,m just saying,don't open the door for strangers in the next few days.
Yeah, what's up with that?
But it could just be the old discord logo
I'm wondering why they even tried to blur it
This should be a series because I can only imagine what you guys can do now ! Cheers !
If I may make a suggestion, this is the perfect time of year to pickup glue sticks at your local discount store, which you could use to temporarily attach the standoffs while you place the motherboard. This works since you're not concenred about grounding to the case.
I really like this case.
If you're serious into 3D printing, you're already having like five boxes of gluestick flying around.
Glue sticks are not jank enough for LTT.
I don't build pc's enough but fantastic suggestion, never thought of it but really one of those "I'm a DF for not thinking of it"
Linus: “My mouth got talent y’all”
Yvone: “Practice makes perfect”
bruh
instantly what i thought.
He hasn't seen the talent my foot has for opening doors while carrying heavy objects. Well as long as the doorknob uses the "Handle" style and not the "Ball" style. In the vocational computer repair class I was in last decade I was carrying a few Dell Opti-plex slim desktops and a classmate that was helping me asked if I needed help opening the door so while carrying 3 computers swung my leg up and proceeded to use my foot to turn the door handle. My friend then says "Ok, never mind".
@@ELENA-yl8yu um
..
As an avid 3D printer.
You had me dying when you said
"Fairly simple 4 hot end setup"
Love it! LOL
you forgot to say "fan"
@@nabildanial00 3D printers don’t have FANS lol, the heck you talking about
@@-cactus.raven- he said "avid," i was referring to that.
@@nabildanial00 yea Ik, what’s wrong with being an avid 3D printer. I would rather have an avid 3D printer than a emotionless one
@@-cactus.raven- It's like the apache attack helicopter thing all over again.
That turned out pretty damn cool, good job guys. Would love to see a bunch more 3d printed case builds going forward. Maybe this will become a real category.
One of the better and more interesting builds you have done recently. Well done.
I feel bad for whoever had to blur that discord shirt. That's a lot of shots, lol.
Though, that begs the question: Why is it blurred?
Branded merch that could be a sponsor, but was not
Ideally you don't want to accidentally advertise/show another brand that hasn't agreed to partake in your production. If their product is shown and one party ends up with bad faith, they could request the entire video to be pulled down until the issue is dealt with.
Especially when its still painfully obvious that its discord. If you have to blur, should scramble pixels too.
@@ClintonHuynh like copyright?
@@isaiahwalking No. Its more like against terms of agreement. Lets say u got sponsored by a food company. Then you show the same product but a different brand. Maybe the company that sponsors you dont want you to show their competitions product.
Idea for locating the spacers for the motherboard without the two man juggling act - place short cut off matchsticks in the brass recievers, thread the spacers onto the matchsticks, drop the motherboard on and the matches will go through the mounting holes, keeping the spacers at least roughly in place. Then simply remove the matchsticks as you go, replacing each in turn with a screw. Job done, and a bit easier than working upside down.
The back of the case is open so if you get one corner in on its own and get the other corner in, you would be able to just slide the spacer in and screw it for the rest of them.
just use glue, Elmer's glue would work great and is easy to remove + its pva so its not like its conductive or anything that would have the possibility of screwing up your pc
@@scandalingshadows Its been a very, very long time since I used PVA glue, but doesnt that take hours to dry properly? And I've never rated the stuf for anything besides paper and cardboard, porous materials
@@scandalingshadows yep, just a quick dot of superglue is quick drying and super easy to remove from flat plastics
The matchstick idea is the best .
man I would kill for a pc build like that. couldnt imagine how nice editing videos and playing games would be on something like that.
I know the designer from the Railcore discord, very cool to see something we've been following for a while showcased like this!
FYI, you can just melt the seams together with a soldering iron and a wedge tip.
Way stronger than screws.
Waiting for the future were we can actually download cars. We're getting pretty close lol
Isn't there a company that 3D prints most parts of a rocket I'm wondering why we haven't seen anyone try a car is far simpler parts
@@IvanSal778 couple orders of magnitude between your home printer and the one used for rockets mind you
The only thing that will really prevent it will be the cost, as an automated manufacturing process in mass quantity will always beat 3D printing in the cost of raw materials. However, there might very well be a market for individual unique designs that will never have the sales numbers for a manufacturer to justify the up-front cost.
@@benjaminmcintosh857 I'm not talking about your daily person I am more curious as to why no billionaires have tried to do something similar.
@@IvanSal778 rockets had a lot of room to be simplified down to something printable, but for cars it's unlikely to ever make sense on a meaningful scale. There is one company making hypercars with predominantly 3D printed parts though, allows for some uniquely shaped parts
just use some hotglue to keep the spacers in place.. comes off easy so wont damage the board or plastic parts..
No need to do acrobatics to put the board on..
This channel gives me hope in humanity.
This channel is so good. I love this channel. I love everyone. Linus is so smart and handsome
No tiktok just ideas its great
@Juliana......... 💋 STFU
I already lost hope God humanity and nothing will change Exept.... This
Next time on LTT: You wouldn't download a 3D printer
You wouldn’t download a graphics card…
There are some 3D printer kits that would need you to print some parts
@@JK-ul3py to make them be able to print bigger parts yeah.
Or even better, an actual 3090
@@JK-ul3py The prusa is a prime example. When doing upgrades, you can opt for the package with or without the plastic parts so you can save a little and print them yourself
What filament was used? He mentions the low shrink rate compared to PLA but I can’t find reference to what was actually used.
I feel like it was an error :p
Aslo would like to know
Maybe ABS
@@giaopx ABS has terrible shrinkage though
Comments I read say PETG
Replying cause I want to know if someone answers
A lot of large retail stores in the Uk use Salesforce.
That "Motion System" sounds like the kind of thing someone could make a small business out of.. Charge a modest overhead for folks to order prints with more quality/features than a home printer can.
That case is freaking dope, too.
@Rita 25 y.o - check my vidéó that comment makes no sense can anyone explain why comments that dont make sense are on legit EVERY SINGLE COMMENT
@@alanalankhalil6159 They are bots that copy comments and spam them everywhere.
It isn't "all that" expensive (in the context of what it is), lower priced than an Up Box2 from tiertime... superior in probably every way except for absolute out of the box generic plug and play.
I have had a bunch of 3d Printers for years, and do interesting stuff from time to time, though more of a sideline than a real "driven" business. The average "that's so cool" person wants too much for too little, hardly worth bothering with - one needs clients who value time, even a lot of "professional wannabe clients" are little more than tyre kickers..
- I do need to upgrade my main FFD printer to hardware with a bit more automation built in.
This is so cool it literally looks like a v-twin engine at the top!
Your so right
Was thinking the design with a few tweaks could be made to look more like a v engine lol
V6!
@@kwanmona7986 bro what you smoking
First thought - would look great as part of a Driving set up build under the hood ;)
I actually used the mainboard of one of the models you showed before for an open bench
Amazing tech
THAT CASE LOOKS INSANE, YALL SHOULD MAKE AND SELL EM
I would love to see them do an entire pc (within reason) I’m sure Alex could work some magic along with the other engineers
@@nobody7817 that’s a fair point, maybe he could work out some type of deal with a fab to create their own stuff - tho that could be expensive as well
"My mouth got talent yo", now we know why Linus's wife has stayed with him despite making all those size jokes XD
He is a cunning linguist, indeed.
As a lifelong gearhead, I'm SO psyched for the future of 3d printing. Intake manifolds, metal exhaust manifolds, etc etc. It's so cool!
The effect at 4:30 can also be reached with printers that can be paused and where you can "hot switch" filament....which is basically all of them these days.
Finally a good pc build for 2021. Just like in the good old days 🙂 Thanks linus for bringing some good memories on pc building that we missed nowadays ☺️
This pc looks amazing! Love the v6 engine look. I would only find a pc like this in my dreams
Tacking the plastic spacers with a tiny amount of glue would be easier mounting that motherboard.
Or even double-sided tape. Probably not optimal, but it could work.
@@benjaminmiddaugh2729 blue tack for the win.
@@R_Forde You could even use something like Sugru, assuming you didn't care about standoff removability.
@@Elemental-IT One of us isn't understanding something about the setup. There are no holes that go all the way through the frame (the screws go into threaded inserts); reversing the board puts the screws in backwards, getting the stuff on the front of the board in the way without doing anything about the standoffs; Unless I'm doing a terrible job of understanding what you have in mind, I don't see how what you suggested helps at all.
@@benjaminmiddaugh2729 You can just use masking tape to hold the screws in the PCB while you install the spacers and the enclosure on it. You can just tilt the enclosure somewhat so the spacers don't slide off the screws, and the layer line texture on the spacers helps keep them in place, and marry the two together, not too difficult at all.
I wanna see this case come back in black, and lian li fans, the pump/rest combo, just a revamp version
I love how the T-shirt was blurred yet everyone knows it's a discord partner t-shirt
Yeah except not.
Discord partner shirts don’t exist, only hoodies.
i like how it is the "old" logo... :)
I know now
@@furSUDO yeah they do i have one, but its a long sleeve winter shirt.
Hey, try using a soldering iron to weld the parts together instead of using glue. It is much much stronger ;)
If one were to use a soldering iron, how hot should it be?
@@MrJeepney123 I started with the hotend tempreture in the beginning, because I had no experience, with 220 C, now I picked up the speed while welding and I use around 300 C. In the beginning, start with around 200C and you can increse it as you get faster at welding ;)
ua-cam.com/video/Cj9TMmUldhc/v-deo.html
TBH, would like to see more 3d printing content. I'd love to buy one, but it seems like a bit of a dark art to do it well. This case looks great!
I have one, its not a dark art. Just tons of tinkering and troubleshooting but the amount of knowledge online makes it super easy if youre okay at google-fu
@@legoyoda2773 I'd love to see the record of someone reasonably hardware/software saavy, but not a 3D printing savvy person, keeping track of how much time they spend screwing around with settings, slicers, failed prints and cleanup, printer fixes/upgrades/etc, per hour of final print time. And then keep data over time, where they use the thing for at least 10 'final print' hours a month or so. Presumably the 'screwing around' percentage goes down, but how much? Does it spike every time they use a new material type? How much? Etc. I'd love to get into it, but it seems like a huge timesink for the level of benefit from having it.
@@davidskidmore3442 honestly its not too bad at first, before getting into it tho Id suggest having ideas of what youd want to use it for. Also being able to 3d cad model is MASSIVE
When you started I thought it was an ugly case but after watching you guys build it, l love it. It’s definitely got a weird look but it grows on you quickly. Thanks for sharing
You guys HAVE to make a video showing off the full capabilities of that motion system. And also some more footage of setting it up/tips & tricks.
Sincerely,
A hobbyist 3d printer that would freaking love one of those things
i would have just glued the spacers in with a mild glue like the purple glue stick i use on my glass print bed... that stuff is pretty mild and is easy to remove later but should be sticky enough to keep it in place to get the screws in...
agreed
Honestly, a drop of water probably is sticky enough for those tiny little thingies.
Just got done watching the bioluminescent dye pc build, then followed up with this one.
Now we need a 3D printed case that incorporates the coolant loop into the frame of the case that is partly clear/translucent combined with the bioluminescent dye.
3D printing things that are water tight is outside the realm of consumer, or even enthusiast printers. Even the more readily available commercial and industrial printers would be bad at it. The best solution would probably be incorporating tubing channels in the case so they become part of the case, even if they aren't initially.
Linus is one of the few Employers that also does the work with their employees. Gotta give him respect for that.
"My mouth's got talent, yo"
"That's using your head!"
I'm dying
Not gonna lie, this is one of the best looking cases I've ever seen!
I loved this build. That's a case I'd show off as much as possible.
With 2 radiators you could have done pump -> gpu -> radiator -> cpu -> radiator -> pump, mainly because then you would get 2 nicely cooled parts other than prioritizing cooling one first then the next
Just what I've been waiting for :). For this project, I recomend a volcano with a 0.6 or even 0.8mm nozzle and 0.3 to 0.6 layer hight. Much faster and the layers look very clean on big parts like this.
line width has big impact on printing speed too.
Great stuff! Would recommend placing and aligning the screw post spacers needed prior to the mainboard install and dab them with super glue to save on those acrobatic installation antics... good giggle viewing though it has to be said!
Holy, that intro was a massive flash back to watching a DVD in the early to mid 2000's. Well done lol
Would like a longer section at the end to show off the build. With more panning / revolving close ups, maybe in some dimmer lighting to show of the lighting. Really show me how the result turned out, the rough corners and all. Maybe I want to build this.
Linus: You can just DOWNLOAD a case!
Also Linus: You’ll need a 10 grand 3D printer to even use it!
You could buy an ender 3 pro for like 200 bucks and just give the case some cuts. To get around the weaknesses for gluing you could easily add some printed connectors in something like meshmixer (its default connector, no extra designing needed) that from experience, are pretty strong and better than glue. Linus has the tech but imo they aren't really that experienced in the 3D printing side of things. There are a lot of ways they could have done it easily and faster with those already expensive prusas if someone took the time to just do some plane cuts and booleans
@@bigprojects2560 Or you could get an Ender 5 Plus, it's larg enough but waaaay cheaper (I think around 500€?). Or if you're into tinkering, just build your own machine in your prefered size, there are a lot of templates for amazing printers you just have to build (my favourite design is the Hevort, but its pretty much overkill in most aspects and almost exclusively made for speed)
3d printing is super accessible now, if you chopped it up you can get it printed. I live in a small town and our public library has 3d printers. They didn't have to use a 10k printer, they just wanted too lol
@@bigprojects2560 ender 3s are a bit too small for this,id recommend any of the cr 10 variants
@@bigprojects2560 Or you could buy a 50$ case and pay less than you would for filament ;D
Colins T-shirt at the end: „There is no cloud. just other people’s computers“
why would they blur that out though?
It actually looks more like the original Kopimi tshirt - Which makes sense why they would censor, considering it essentially support piracy.
I’m pretty sure it’s a discord shirt and LMG isn’t affiliated with discord in any way.
@@jordanc8926 coz it's another company's logo which they have no intention of showing since they aren't advertising it
Looks like a Discord logo shirt to me.
If it could procedurally optimize airflow based on the components submitted, that would be really cool
It's an open case. I don't think there is that much to optimize
@@ezanchi5422 Yeah, have now seen that but I’m still dreaming of some weird organic thing that’s more substantial
I like to see builds like this but for my personal preferences the most important things (in order) with a case are
1. Dust control
2. Airflow
3. Noise
Thanks for sacrificing your weekends, Colin. Let’s talk about your shirt though 🧐
Yeah I was looking for a comment about it, why is his shirt censored?
What logo is on his shirt?
@@propelproject It kinda looks like the discord logo to me, but I'm not sure why it'd be censored
Yeah, def the old discord logo
@@useruser-ti1og oh that would make sense
Some Uni-Fans would of been really neat to use, go from six cables to just two. That is an amazing build, I’m jealous.
Lol i've been literally printing a case for myself for the last week haha, Perfect timing LTT!
which one?
@@Prophes0rWell, pretty much every part of that case is designed around 3d printing so you wouldn't be doing that with sheets of anything. Specially not with hand tools.
AISURU.TOKYO/machiko?[Shake-body🤗]
(◍•ᴗ•◍)✧。*18 years and over 🍑❤
UA-cam: This is fine
Someone: Says "heck"
UA-cam: Be gone
#однако #я #люблю #таких #рыбаков #Интересно #забавно #девушка #смешная #垃圾
@@manicdan481 it's a case i designed to hold the motherboard and screen from an old laptop and mount it to a Vesa arm. This will run octoprint for both my printers.
@@Prophes0r pla is cheap and hitting print is easy.
That definitely one of my favorite pc builds, I love the minimalistic design
"my mouth got talent, yo" was the best laugh I've had in days 🤣
You should probably watch some better comedy.
Her: "I've never done this before"
Also her:
Colin you've done a great job... Thanks Linus for having Colin in your team
that looks badass! damn 3d printing opens up so much potential for weird builds and color schemes
It looks like an engine block. How cool!
18:50 The big blurred area on the t-shirt makes a big accent on the Discord logo
I noticed that aswell then I rewatched that part in 0.25x speed and noticed 2 more things, 1: he sounds extremely tired but thats probably normal for 0.25x speed, and 2: at 19:00 he looks like he's about to snap XD
1:07 hey Linus, when you are merging 3D printed parts, DON'T GLUE! Use a soldering iron to "weld" the plastic pieces together, then sand and paint it. It's totally seemless and super structurally sound!
(It still takes a long time though lol)
What iron temps do you use for this? Always wanted to try
@@alexhb12333 Depends hugely on the plastics used. It should be hot enough to melt rather quickly, but not so hot that it smokes a bunch or burns.
@@ubberJakerz that only works on thin parts. If you have anything thicker than 10mm or so you end up only having the surface bonded. Similar to a concept in welding where you get drastically weaker joints with poor weld penetration. Most plastics don't melt together that great with a soldering iron either.
@@zakm0n Thickness isn't really a limiting factor. Look up Frankly Built. He has a video on fusing huge swords. He penetrates deep into parts and fills the holes with extra filament.
That look at 16:35 : "He signs my paycheck, what you gonna do?"
useful idea: use longer heat inserts to go through the spacers and the frame. 😁
This is a great video, and a testamet to sanjay and company and the legacy while being VERY much LMG! thank you
17:06 I like how it kinda looks like a v6 engine