I needed to step away from UA-cam dealing with our home flooding. I'm just getting back into recording in the shop now, but it's going to be a bit to get everything sorted again
@GrindhousePerformance awww man, I'm really sorry to hear that you where effected. My thoughts are with you. Don't rush into it until u can get back on ur feet man. Lots of love ❤️
For those of you that don’t know, if you need a 3d scanner and you have an iphone, you can use it as a 3d scanner, use the front camera for fine details as well.
Don't bother, they're rubbish. Too many fucking times have I had to clean up some wanna be draftsman's iphone 3d scans. It's tedious, boring, and they're too inaccurate to get anything correct. Go buy a creality scanner. Costs less than an iPhone, and theyre ACTUALLY GOOD. It's to the point where all my subcontracting work has a clause that says if you provide a SINGLE, iPhone scan of anything, you're getting ghosted, no matter how far you are into tue project. Seems to have fixed the issue.
@@NeoIsrafil no actually every camera can do it using photogrammetry software . but you need to have at least 40 percent of redondant coverage between 2 photos to build the 3d model
It's crazy the stuff you come up with! I like how descriptive you are with your videos. Every time you post something cool like this, it makes me want to try new things. I just recently bought a welder and I started with 2d design software. Keep the amazing videos coming! Can't wait to see the finished product!
Reading this made my day, it's exactly why I wanted to start making videos. I'm still learning every day, just doing the best that I can. The welder is a total game changer! It will really open up what's possible
I love the car! My brother had an older one back in the day that he tricked out. Your work is amazing. And YES, please create more videos like this. They are a pleasure to watch and inspirational. Can’t wait to see the end result on the console.
Hey that's really kind thanks. Mostly everything on this car is totally new to me, just trying to do the best I can. Im glad you've been enjoying the series 👍
Just found this video. I do alot of car related 3D printing so your channel has been helpful for me to get more of an idea of how I can implement this workflow in my projects.
i just binged your whole Datsun build playlist. Awesome work across the board! i'm pumped to see how the center console turns out, i'm sure it'll be incredible, just like the dash, and everything else on the build for that matter.
Found your channel again for the second time. Watched your original 3D die press and though it was cool. Now seeing you apply the die press and do awesome work fusing 3D printing with send cut send is awesome! Can’t wait to see more
Dude! Just found this channel and sad to see there hasn’t been an update in awhile. Really hope you can get things back up, it’s really great content and hope to see more!
Definitely hasn't been the year I'd planned for! I've been dealing with repairing my home from flood/storm damage earlier this year. It's taken a lot more time, money and energy than I thought it would've. I'll be back to recording projects this fall!
My God, man, as someone who designs every day using solidworks, you are an inspiration to me give me more drive to get back to work tomorrow and do better with my designs. Keep up the great work.
It's so motivating hearing comments like this, thanks for commenting. I used to do a lot of CAD years ago, but these projects lately have pushed me into an entirely new set of challenges that are really exciting to tackle 👍
That really means a lot, thank you. I put a ton of hours into them between ideas, planning, editing, and actually doing the work. It really helps hearing that I'm doing something right 👍
Hey dude, keep up the good work. You do amazing at explaining and simplifying the basic building blocks to what goes into an engineering problem like this. I love it and cannot wait to see this come together.
Haha, that's fantastic. This has been a bucket list car for me for over a decade, I'm really fortunate to have the opportunity. Thank you for subscribing, I hope you enjoy watching the rest of the build series!
Hey thank you! I'm glad you enjoyed the project. I made a lot of mistakes to get it to this point, definitely wasn't the first go at modeling the console haha
Soooo cool man this is a crazy project and can’t I can’t wait to see how it looks finished up! Quick tip for modeling weird shapes irl, I always find it easier to model if I use datums, scales and loads of pictures. If you bring your pictures into cad with the correct scales and a solid datum, you’ll find modeling those odd shapes to be super quick and you can focus more on how to work around it! Hopefully that helps! That console is absolutely insane, props to you, such cool work!
So long as it fits 😅😅 I'm excited for this one, but getting everything to print has been pretty challenging. Excited to see it all come together though
Subscribed just for the first minute ideas. My Chevelle has been torn apart for the last 3 years. the ideas here make me want to get off my butt, get my printer working and see what I can do.
Quit saying it's out of your conf comfort zone, or you're not quite there yet. In my book, you are a GOD! Good job. Make a modern cockpit also. Like the Pansonic Cockpit Stereo from 1979.
@@GrindhousePerformance Sorry to hear about your house flooding. Had a similar issue a couple of years back, but I got lucky and was able to pump it out before I lost the furnace. Hope the cleanup/rebuild goes well and that you didn't lose too much. Looking forward to seeing where this goes. Just picked up a scanner and looking to do some work on my '84 Rx7.
@@MatthewScur Hey I appreciate that thank you. We're on the tail end of repairs and I'm thankful to be putting it behind me. What did you get for a scanner? I've been eying an Einstar for doing some videos/testing
Well done for a first crack! You picked a good part to start with. If you ever want to give it or another body panel another shot, give me a shout. Ill try and give you a few pointers.
Hey thank you! At this point everything's been printed, but it didn't come easily at all. Had a lot of issues, trying to figure out a way to get it into a decent video to share!
You're doing an amazing job. I don't know if anyone mentioned it farther down in the comments, but you might investigate using photogrammetry in an instance like this. All you need is your digital camera and the software to stitch the images together, and it builds a 3D model of the object. Then with one known dimension, you should be able to put it into Fusion360 or SolidWorks and manipulate it. Just a suggestion.
Finally found someone ahead of me on this trail. I'm working on a 90 foxbody and will be 3d printing a lot of the interior parts. You might want to look into 3d scanners, I'm learning how to work my Revopoint Pop2. I'll be able to get a scan of the sheet metal into CAD and design the interior around it. Just subbed, I'm off to binge the build now.
Props for just going at it the way you did. but you should check out the 3D scanners, the Revopoint mini and POP2 scanners are good sub $1000 scanners. I'm hoping to get one soon for this kind of work too. nice work
Thank you! I'd talked myself out of the kickstarter, but I'm definitely curious how it would've performed for this. Ive demoed some higher end units and think I'll wind up getting the whole car scanned professionally
@@GrindhousePerformance Don't know if you've seen it, but Shining3D has released their Einstar 3D scanner that seems to be pretty good (and relatively cheap for its performance) for automotive scans from the reviews I've seen on it so far. Also, would like to say I love the videos! I just saw them for the first time today and have gotten motivation to start working on my Miata again finally from all your amazing work!
I Have a 1971 240Z that needs a complete rebuild but is 100% complete and runs. I really like the wide body kit you used and would like to go that route. Thanks for the inspiration
@@rebuildranch1225 Awesome! The widebody kit is definitely an advanced install compared to bolt ons, but I think the effort's worth it. I've still got a lot to do on the widebody to finish mounting it to the car and clean up some of the body lines / fitment issues
You need a 3d scanner. It's cool that you are doing what I've always wanted to do, and that is custom fab. I hope one day I get to have enough time to chase my dreams and design cool stuff and 3d print/make custom parts.
I'd love one! I'm not yet convinced the budget ones would work out the way I wanted. Ive got a tendency of immediately wanting to test the limits of equipment and I think I'd be let down with a scanner I can actually afford. Have been saving up though!
I've got that same amp in two of my Z31's with a 3D printed mount that locates the control pod at the front of the jockey box. I like it because i can use the line level input to retain the factory headunit and it is stealth, yet accessible. As far as how it sounds...its kinda flat but that could be very well the Rockford Fosgate R165X3's it running. I also ran a single channel amp off of the kenwood and its running a old school 8in bazooka tube in the hatch. Pretty respectable for such a small amp. Unfortunately They are discontinued now. Great work on the console design, I'm definitely learning a lot from your videos.
Dang, that's a little disappointing to hear! For the packaging of everything it worked out really, really well. I had a pretty low bar for audio quality from such a small package, so hopefully it sounds decent enough through the JL's!
Love this! I wonder, could you 3d print a traditional dashboard with funtional dials and buttons for some of these new cars with only touchscreens? An extreme example could be adding a real dashboard to a Tesla, but I'm just talking about things like a more traditional car such as a Ford explorer.
@@GrindhousePerformance I've read similar things from folks who wanted to remove the entertainment console from the middle of vehicles. They are very distracting while driving and I actually cover them when I drive-it makes so much difference, especially at night! But people said re-wiring the entertainment is extremely difficult to do especially if it's tied to the temperature control. But I wonder...if it's only the entertainment console, if you just swap in an old radio/cd player, print resin backing to make it flush against the dash, and hook the speakers up...if it's doable?....a downgrade/upgrade as it were, lol.
This one was a brute force project! I modeled it wrong or badly several times to get here, but I'm really happy with it. Thinking of doing some more fusion focused videos in the future
I have a big project I am doing myself, and its nice to see how you're doing your project too. I am thinking that I shall design and make prototypes in 3D and then use those as plugs for moulds that I am hoping will become carbon fibre ... with the size of my project I think I may be biting off more than I can chew; but watching your enthusiasm is fantastic! More videos like this please!
I definitely feel the same way! Big huge prints like this get really frustrating but hopefully both of our results will be worth it. At the very least we'll learn something for next time 👍
Definitely didn't mean to leave so many people hanging with the project! I've been dealing with rebuilding and repairing our home after flood damage and it's made it difficult to continue making content the last few months
That CAD drawing on Fusion 360 is GANGSTA. Well done mate. Wish I was half as good as you @ modelling components on Fusion 360. Can you direct me to where I can go to learn more about modelling on fusion 360 ? so I can be a wizard like you, LOL
Hey thanks so much, I really appreciate it. The best advice I can give is to just keep playing around with the software. I modeled the console probably 4 or 5 times BADLY before I was able to come up with a process that actually worked for this project. A lot of the videos I've found trying to teach the software are very basic/simple, but they don't really help solve whatever problems you're working on. I've tried to add some value where I can without it being to dry in a lot of my videos, but I've been getting asked this a lot so I might dedicate a couple videos to the topic in the future. Good luck and stick with it! It's 100% worth learning. Have a good day
I'm going through that right now. Trying to print everything in ASA and it's having a hard time printing what I thought was a pretty straightforward geometry. Going to keep trying!
@@GrindhousePerformance I was using ASA as well. It had the tendency to lift in the corners. I am planning on maybe switching to wood. It got very frustrating, I abandoned that project about 8 months ago and haven't come back to it. Also my center console is not as ambitious as yours. Good luck, and it is awesome to see you back working on the Z. Congratulations on the SEMA spotlight
@@AW_DIY_garage Thanks so much! It was surreal having the opportunity to see it on display and see people's reactions to it at the show. With enough bed temperature, an enclosure, a wide brim, and a purple gluestick I was able to get the ASA to adhere nicely to my glass bed. I'm running 95*C bed temp, and it's been enough to keep these pieces stuck for the long (very long) print cycles. I'm struggling with a lot of surface finish blemishes, pinholes, and oddities that don't present themselves until half a day into getting the print running, which is starting to get pretty frustrating but I'm going to keep trying!
impressive work dude,you show us so many different skills,mind blowing.As i think you cannot print that in one piece one of the challenges will be to fit them together without visible gaps where not intended.Keep the good work going.Greetings from germany and merry christmas.
Hey merry Christmas! Thanks for the kind words. You're exactly right, the console is going to get split into 9 separate segments and joined together. It's proving difficult. Hopefully have a video together before the end of the month showing what I'm thinking might work!
Hey I just came acrosss your video and Man U are a genius/talented man .. u inspire me to keep creating with with 3d printer .. hopefully one day I be close tk your level
Hey thanks! You will get there, 100%. I modeled this console probably 10 different times, badly, before sharing what worked in the video. Being consistent and persistent learning what works and what doesn't work will get you 99% of the way there, and the rest is luck! I'm thinking about doing some tips and tricks videos I'm the future. I've been penciling ideas as I've come across them
When it comes to cars, my personal weakness is 1960's and early 1970's American iron. Incorporating 3D printing into your project, is definitely something I am interested in, especially with some parts of those cars being unobtanium. I also don't know squat about CAD, so this could help maintain my interest in learning how to use it.
Good stuff. Nice looking design that looks like it will go well with your gauge setup. I'm still trying to learn Fusion 360, so it's cool to see the process others use. This project seems like it would have been perfect for some sort of 3D scanner to digitally collect all of the dimensions of the trans tunnel, etc. I actually just picked up a 3DMakerPro Lynx large-format scanner as a Prime Day deal. Haven't gotten to actually play with it yet, but looking forward to being able to scan vehicle interiors and exteriors, etc. to aid in helping me design stuff for my own project cars.You should seriously consider adding some sort of 3D scanner to your arsenal.
I'm hoping the vision for the interior starts coming together as we get all the individual pieces made up. I'd LOVE to get a scanner, but I'm so torn on what kind've budget to put together for one, and setting honest expectations for what I get out of it. I'd hate to spend a couple thousand dollars on one that winds up being a paperweight when I try actually using it, but the ones I would really like are well out of my budget. I'm excited how much this industry is growing though, and am hoping for big improvements in software as the competition continues for budget friendly scanners.
@@GrindhousePerformance True. The current offerings definitely run the gamut from really cheap ($300-$400ish) to well into 5 figures. I picked up a relatively cheap one (that can do larger format scans) to play around with (was $399 on Prime day deal) to get my feet wet. Hopefully it works decently enough. Will let you know how it works when I finally have time to play with it...
I’m new to your channel. A lot of fun and exciting trying new things, for sure. Where you guys located? And are you interested in doing other projects?
I'd absolutely love to get one! I've been pretty impressed with some recent scanners, and I think they'll only get better from here for budget/pro-sumer units
@@GrindhousePerformance yeah I feel yah man I’m in the same boat the only difference is that you actually know how to use CAD and I don’t and that is sooo frustrating for me since I got sooo much idea and can’t do shit about (expert start learning CAD which I’m gonna start soon) i’ve been working on my car for like more them a year and probably gonna need 1 more year to finish it 😫 hate my ADHD and dyslexia coz I’m always trying to find way to improve things and never finishing that I already started 😑 but I can promise you one thing! That when I’m done with the car it’s gonna be epic 😎
@@ali-sleimanchehade6129I'm very familiar with projects taking way too long LOL. A piece of advice that's helped me. Instead of considering the entire car a "project", consider each individual thing you're trying to do a project in itself. By breaking things down, at least for me, it seems at least a little less daunting. Whenever I look at the car as a whole it's easy for my mind to wander and to get overwhelmed. By focusing on specific projects, it's helped me make progress without getting too swept up in everything I have going on. You will get there with CAD. It's just time and practice. Most of what I learned was from being really persistent and trying over and over again until I figured things out. I've got a couple Fusion videos planned to help share some tricks I've learned over the years. 👍
hell yeah, i just starting to learn the 3d designing space, it is pretty cool to see it before it is built. I normally just have a bad sketch and start making stuff. I've got a guy coming to do some 3d scanning to help me design my chassis. huge learning curve. ha ha
@@GrindhousePerformance ha ha yea, i'm trying to force myself into the 3d world. That consul blows my mind. I do love working with fusion though, it seems somewhat easy to get my head around, and there are a lot of tutorials on youtube for it. Love watching your vids, your doing an awesome job.
@@animal_engineering thank you! Fusion works really well once you've gotten used to some of the quirks. I've broken a lot of models trying to come up with this one 😅
Just stumbled across this video, and seeing it's already a year old I can only assume (/hope) that you've bought a 3D scanner by now - would've turned this into a 10 minute operation. An hour with post-processing. Anyway, good job pulling it off w/o one; the design of the console is nice as well.
Hey thanks, a scanner is definitely on my list for the future. Unfortunately haven't been able to buy any new tools in awhile now. Eying the einstar, was hoping for a rev2, but not so interested in the all-in-one they just released
@@GrindhousePerformance I thought they did release a new revision just recently ... was that a different model? The Einstar is on my wishlist as well. I just don't have many project going on right now that'd benefit from a new toy, so I have to pretend to be responsible with my budget for a little longer ^^
Just found your channel, love the videos! I have a few suggestions for ya : 1) It might be worth your time to invest in a cheap 3D scanning tool to scan the amorphous body of the car. Then you can define work planes and mounting holes based off of the raw point cloud. 2) For a curvy, amorphous part, such as the center console, I'd highly recommend using surface-based modelling on the surface tab of Fusion. 3) If you're willing to pay, there is an industrial design extension (monthly sub available) that will give you an advanced patterning tool that has a TON of useful features. I'd guess that it's also way more optimized than patterning a sketch feature and having thousands of points+lines, which as you found will often crash Fusion lol.
Wow thanks for taking the time with your comments here, there's a lot of great advice. I'm not sold yet on a budget scanner. Ive been saving to get the whole car professionally scanned instead of having me fight or struggle with a budget unit. I've demoed some in the 10,000$ range where the software was still kinda crap, and I can't imagine the 1-2,000$ units are truthfully there yet. I've watched tutorials on the surface modeling in fusion and totally forgot that wouldve been an option for modeling the console. I should spend more time learning the software because I'd guess body panels would also be much easier to model this way. Do you have any other extensions you recommend? This is an avenue within fusion360 that I'm totally unaware of but would be interested in exploring or recording videos for. Thanks again for putting the time into your explanations here, I'm glad you found my videos!
Someone might have mentioned this already, but regarding the speakers. Are they supposed to be woofers or midtone? You should consider adding a divider in the middle (if space?) to prevent the movement of the membrane to act upon each other.
I originally planned to isolate the speakers in their own compartments with vented chambers and everything, but packaging got to be really tight/complicated. Maybe in a future revision if these sound terrible. I'm keeping my expectations low with sound quality, but will definitely be better than what came out of the car! You're 100% right though
@GrindhousePE you could wire them out of phase with each other, so when the left side expand, the right contract. (If you plan to use them as lo range/woofers).
Since it's getting printed in a bunch of smaller pieces at minimum it's going to get sanded and painted. I've been interested in possibly wrapping it but I'm not sure yet. Getting the pieces printed properly has been a whole can of worms 😅
Nice. I am not a Black belt in 3D design but I love this. I hope some day it will become easier wit Ai. And I can just upload the scan of somthing and then instruct through terminal ! Then a world of creativity will blossom for everyone 😊
Believe me when I say I had probably modeled the console 4-5 times incorrectly before I finally was able to get it to work; I'm definitely still learning as well. I'm very excited for AI being more attainable for CAD modeling, it does exist today as 'generative design' and it's pretty wild what it's able to do. Just excited to see it become more entry level friendly!
Have you considered a 3d scanner for some of the future projects? Would have made designing around the awkwardly shaped trans tunnel, etc., a bit easier.
@@MrSlim1225 I'd love to get one someday. There's so many softwares and options now and the tech seems to be really improving at the entry level. I don't know whether the ones I can actually afford would be good enough yet for these kinds of projects or if it'd just turn into an expensive paperweight. 😅
Can you give a breakdown of the cost of send cut send parts how you designed stuff for them ect. Also what are you printing in ? Do you have concerns about temps reaching the glass temp of your filament after completion?
Hey sure; the 1/8" steel framing parts ran roughly $200, the top aluminum covers were $45, the titanium pieces were about $20 bucks total. I had SendCutSend powder coat the aluminum mesh panels on the top and sides, as well as the brackets for the speakers, and those pieces cut and coated were ~ $180. I'm printing the console in multiple pieces out of ASA. ASA should be resistant enough, I have seen it used successfully in engine bays, but like most things on my channel, it's still an experiment that I'm trying to learn from. We'll have to see how it holds up! Hope this all helps!
@@GrindhousePerformance very helpful I'm learning so much from what you're doing. I do car stuff. I do 3d printing but the way youre combining them is like why didn't I think of this.
@@Phil4222 It's a lot of experimentation! Being totally honest I don't really know how much of this stuff will work out the way I hope it does. I just want to try and learn and share whatever I can. 3D printing is a really exciting technology to me and I want to show people it can be so much more than making toys and widgets
Been meaning to 3d print my own center console but couldn’t figure out a good way to start. I like your approach with small and quick templates to datum and do from there. What version of f360 are you using? It seems my student/hobbyist free version can barely load a sketch at this point . Having the same issues with patterns as you. The throttling is hardcore
Im using the step above the student version, I needed it for exporting the laser cutting files if I remember correctly. My issues wound up being hardware related, the PC I started this project on was ~8 years old and couldn't handle it
hay. i know this vid is old. but canu do a follow up on the audio side of this car? idl ove to know how it came out sounding to you. and what things u mightve wanted to do differently in retrospective. love audio stuff, especially custom audio stuff
What wasn't shown in the video was the 30 something hours spent modeling it all the wrong ways before I finally got things right, hahaha. Glad you liked it!
I just found your channel and subbed instantly. I hope you come back to this project. I know life gets busy. Im SUPER interested in this as im building a 240sx time attack car at the moment (no...im not your average fuck boi with a 240...fyi)
Hey thank you, I'm glad you've been into watching my projects. I had to take a step away from UA-cam the last few months to deal with storm and flooding damage. I've slowly been getting back into recording in the shop but you're 100% right, life gets into the way and sometimes it's tough as hell getting back into the swing of things after being gone for so long. Love 240's, wish they were still affordable haha. Cool to see one set up for grip
Great work. I'd suggest adding a slight angle to where the speakers mount so they are at least facing towards you a little bit for better sound imaging. 😎👍👍
I'm surprised nobody else said this, you're 100% right. The pedal box is really cramped and will only get worse with the roll cage coming in. The console hangs over the corners of the tunnel so clearance wpuldve been tough without a total redesign. The audiophile in me is bothered, but with how loud the cars going to be the speakers are almost just for show 🤣🤣
very cool I took 3d animation at Vancouver film school using Maya design software ,like to design dash parts for c4 corvettes, as they have too much of that cheap plastic panels and trim parts.anyhow vey good video
Man... giving me a great thing to do to play with my 3d scanner and printers. 😂 Itd be fun to make a better, more custom console, have extra space for my smokes and the drink the wife usually has, etc
Great vids man. Did you consider photogrammetry or even acquiring a lidar equipped apple device to map your models around? Used it for car wrapping in the past and was very effective. Keep up the great work. PS, Haven't finished vid yet, so apologies if you come up with this later...
I've watched some videos on photogrammetry and am really interested in giving it a shot sometime. More softwares and things to learn 😅 but it looks really effective. I'd love to get a scanner someday too but I don't think the entry level ones are really worth much
Hey thank you! The pocketed sections of the console are 3.2mm thick (makes it 4 easy lines with a 0.8mm nozzle). The thicker ribbed areas are 6mm. I'm using ASA as the filament for the console.
@@GrindhousePerformance noted, thanks. In my old car I intended to printout a new console by ABS plastic. But it stay a dream only, and I sold my car as is.
Everything's printed, I'm working on filming everything and getting the pieces joined together! Hopefully soon, project got sidelined way longer than I thought it would.
It's certainly possible. There's still going to be metal separating the tunnel and the console technically has an air gap everywhere it isn't mounted to the tunnel. I figure I'll give it a try this way and if it warps I'll look at using the model to make a composite version
Haha I'm sorry! Everything's printed, I'm working on filming everything and getting the pieces joined together! Hopefully soon, project got sidelined way longer than I thought it would.
To create a 3d print like that do you have to make it in small pieces and glue it together? Also how did you learn to to use the software to customize and make your design?
Yeah it's going to be broken up into several pieces and joined together. I'm actually finally printing it now for part 2 😅. I went to engineering school, but I mostly learned CAD from messing around with it. I find it really enjoyable to learn and practice
Thank you! I should have added more of an armrest and storage. By the time I started filming I had a couple weeks trying and failing at CAD to get this together the way I wanted and didn't put a lot of thought into extra features. Maybe in rev2.0!
This channel so legit. Speaks to those of us who are capable but still learning - and works for those of us with "normal" resources.
Thanks for that, I put a ton of effort into these videos and it's awesome hearing it's landing with the right people
I’ve used f360. You are engineer level doing shit :)
as someone who loves cars, 3d printing, and mechanics i would love to see if you ever ended up actually doing this, please come back!
I needed to step away from UA-cam dealing with our home flooding. I'm just getting back into recording in the shop now, but it's going to be a bit to get everything sorted again
@GrindhousePerformance awww man, I'm really sorry to hear that you where effected. My thoughts are with you. Don't rush into it until u can get back on ur feet man. Lots of love ❤️
For those of you that don’t know, if you need a 3d scanner and you have an iphone, you can use it as a 3d scanner, use the front camera for fine details as well.
Do you know if you can 3d scan with a Samsung galaxy s21,22,23 ultra?
@@hdhellion4128I think you can. Apps like Scandy Pro work decent
The cameras with multiple lenses on the same size can usually do it from a hardware perspective. Software-wise that's up to programmers.
Don't bother, they're rubbish. Too many fucking times have I had to clean up some wanna be draftsman's iphone 3d scans. It's tedious, boring, and they're too inaccurate to get anything correct. Go buy a creality scanner. Costs less than an iPhone, and theyre ACTUALLY GOOD. It's to the point where all my subcontracting work has a clause that says if you provide a SINGLE, iPhone scan of anything, you're getting ghosted, no matter how far you are into tue project. Seems to have fixed the issue.
@@NeoIsrafil no actually every camera can do it using photogrammetry software . but you need to have at least 40 percent of redondant coverage between 2 photos to build the 3d model
I'm eagerly waiting for the update video.
Excellent content
Thank you! I had to put my channel on the backburner when my home flooded. Just getting back into recording now. Uploads in January!
@@GrindhousePerformance I'll be waiting for it :))
It's crazy the stuff you come up with! I like how descriptive you are with your videos. Every time you post something cool like this, it makes me want to try new things. I just recently bought a welder and I started with 2d design software. Keep the amazing videos coming! Can't wait to see the finished product!
Reading this made my day, it's exactly why I wanted to start making videos. I'm still learning every day, just doing the best that I can. The welder is a total game changer! It will really open up what's possible
Same as the previous comment, I really want to see if you finished this. I don't hang around for vids long and your held my attention.
Thank you! I had to put my channel on the backburner when my home flooded. Just getting back into recording now. Uploads in January!
This hits just right. Keep making videos like this please. Can't wait to see what it looks like in it's final form
Hey thanks! Working on it more today 👍
I love the car! My brother had an older one back in the day that he tricked out. Your work is amazing. And YES, please create more videos like this. They are a pleasure to watch and inspirational. Can’t wait to see the end result on the console.
Hey that's really kind thanks. Mostly everything on this car is totally new to me, just trying to do the best I can. Im glad you've been enjoying the series 👍
Just found this video. I do alot of car related 3D printing so your channel has been helpful for me to get more of an idea of how I can implement this workflow in my projects.
dude this video is insane. added this to my list of car projects
i just binged your whole Datsun build playlist. Awesome work across the board! i'm pumped to see how the center console turns out, i'm sure it'll be incredible, just like the dash, and everything else on the build for that matter.
I really hope it works out! So far printings been a real struggle but I think I'm making progress. Glad UA-cam recommended me and you gave it a shot 🤘
1976 Datsun 280Z was my first car! Loved that thing.
Sick! It's always been a bucket list car for me. This was my first one but I've always loved the early Z's
Found your channel again for the second time. Watched your original 3D die press and though it was cool. Now seeing you apply the die press and do awesome work fusing 3D printing with send cut send is awesome! Can’t wait to see more
Welcome back! Im excited to find more ways to bring functional printing and laser cutting into the project. Glad you're enjoying the projects 👍
Looking forward to seeing it come together. I really like it. Thank you for explaining it and your thought process.
Making progress on this this week! It's been way too long since I've been able to work on the car
Can't wait to see how's it'll turn out! I've been thinking about doing this for a 924 for years.
Dude! Just found this channel and sad to see there hasn’t been an update in awhile. Really hope you can get things back up, it’s really great content and hope to see more!
Definitely hasn't been the year I'd planned for! I've been dealing with repairing my home from flood/storm damage earlier this year. It's taken a lot more time, money and energy than I thought it would've. I'll be back to recording projects this fall!
This is such a cool use of consumer 3D printers. Really shows how your creativity is the limits of these machines.
Fingers crossed it actually all works out! 😅
Very nice, love to see more guys incorporating 3D printing into car builds. I'll keep watching to see how this all comes out.
Hopefully have a new episode on the console this Friday! Its been a major pain and took way longer than I thought it would
This build is the best I've seen in a long time. Keep up the good work.
Hey thanks for that, really! Working on the console this week
My God, man, as someone who designs every day using solidworks, you are an inspiration to me give me more drive to get back to work tomorrow and do better with my designs. Keep up the great work.
It's so motivating hearing comments like this, thanks for commenting. I used to do a lot of CAD years ago, but these projects lately have pushed me into an entirely new set of challenges that are really exciting to tackle 👍
My new favorite UA-cam channel. Dude....don't change a thing, your videos are great! Can't wait to see how this turns out!!
That really means a lot, thank you. I put a ton of hours into them between ideas, planning, editing, and actually doing the work. It really helps hearing that I'm doing something right 👍
Hey dude, keep up the good work. You do amazing at explaining and simplifying the basic building blocks to what goes into an engineering problem like this. I love it and cannot wait to see this come together.
Hey that means a lot, really. Thank you. Printing isnt going too terribly smoothly but we'll get there! 😅
First video I see of you in my thumbnail, click for the 3d printed center console and its for a FairladyZ, literally my dream car... New sub!
Haha, that's fantastic. This has been a bucket list car for me for over a decade, I'm really fortunate to have the opportunity. Thank you for subscribing, I hope you enjoy watching the rest of the build series!
This is insane how easy you make this look i got a lot to learn haha but really i find designing like this super difficult well done and cool design
Hey thank you! I'm glad you enjoyed the project. I made a lot of mistakes to get it to this point, definitely wasn't the first go at modeling the console haha
I wouldn’t have touched this project without a 3D scanner… 😂
Einstar is a good one for this kind of project.
I'd love to get one someday! I know the lower end ones have been getting surprisingly good
Soooo cool man this is a crazy project and can’t I can’t wait to see how it looks finished up! Quick tip for modeling weird shapes irl, I always find it easier to model if I use datums, scales and loads of pictures. If you bring your pictures into cad with the correct scales and a solid datum, you’ll find modeling those odd shapes to be super quick and you can focus more on how to work around it! Hopefully that helps! That console is absolutely insane, props to you, such cool work!
That's great advice, I always forget about importing photos into CAD
At first I thought "hey I could do this for my car" and then I watched you do it and determined that no I cannot do it 😂
If I can do it, there's a good chance you can too haha.
@GrindhousePerformance I'm not good with computer design. I just started to dabble in tinkercad.
Very Cool. This kind of prototyping is exhausting but when you put it in the car for the last time..All the work will be worth it. Keep Going!!!!!
So long as it fits 😅😅 I'm excited for this one, but getting everything to print has been pretty challenging. Excited to see it all come together though
Just started watching ure channel....really awesome stuff you doing. I like it! Great combination of 3D printing and automotive fab stuff....
Hey thanks! I'm glad you've been enjoying the series! 👍
Subscribed just for the first minute ideas. My Chevelle has been torn apart for the last 3 years. the ideas here make me want to get off my butt, get my printer working and see what I can do.
I love that, winter's a good time to get started!
Amazing work - would love to see how this turns out. Thinking of doing a roof console in my car - your videos are an inspiration.
Quit saying it's out of your conf comfort zone, or you're not quite there yet. In my book, you are a GOD! Good job. Make a modern cockpit also. Like the Pansonic Cockpit Stereo from 1979.
Incredibly kind of you thanks! Im still learning, most of what you see on video is the results of trying and failing several times 🤣
Awesome job! I love to look inside the design process and working it out!!!
Hey I'm glad you're into the series! 👍
This got intense 😅
Progress update??
Where / when is this final console?
@@AliasHSW I had to put UA-cam on the backburner dealing with our home flooding. I'm looking at getting back to making videos this fall!
@@GrindhousePerformance Sorry to hear about your house flooding. Had a similar issue a couple of years back, but I got lucky and was able to pump it out before I lost the furnace. Hope the cleanup/rebuild goes well and that you didn't lose too much. Looking forward to seeing where this goes. Just picked up a scanner and looking to do some work on my '84 Rx7.
@@MatthewScur Hey I appreciate that thank you. We're on the tail end of repairs and I'm thankful to be putting it behind me. What did you get for a scanner? I've been eying an Einstar for doing some videos/testing
Dude, I love that center console design!!!
Hey thanks! Glad you're into it! Trying to make progress on it this week, it's been way too long!
Well done for a first crack! You picked a good part to start with. If you ever want to give it or another body panel another shot, give me a shout. Ill try and give you a few pointers.
Appreciate that, thank you!
Dude... stumbled across this from 3d printed dies and wtf... incredible project! love love love the Z
Haha hey thanks! I'm glad you're into the project, hope you check out my other build videos when you have the chance
working my way through from the start for sure
"Welcome to another episode of my Dad/Son 280z project car build." Every damn time..
I'm going to 3d print the aero structural parts (using carbon panels between them) for the diffuser on my track ls3 s2k. Plus many other things!
Freaking sick! Bucket list car and swap for me, for sure
Great video! Any update on this? Did you print the parts yet?
Hey thank you! At this point everything's been printed, but it didn't come easily at all. Had a lot of issues, trying to figure out a way to get it into a decent video to share!
You're doing an amazing job. I don't know if anyone mentioned it farther down in the comments, but you might investigate using photogrammetry in an instance like this. All you need is your digital camera and the software to stitch the images together, and it builds a 3D model of the object. Then with one known dimension, you should be able to put it into Fusion360 or SolidWorks and manipulate it. Just a suggestion.
I'm really curious about photogrammetry, I haven't tried it but I'd really like to in a future video
Finally found someone ahead of me on this trail. I'm working on a 90 foxbody and will be 3d printing a lot of the interior parts. You might want to look into 3d scanners, I'm learning how to work my Revopoint Pop2. I'll be able to get a scan of the sheet metal into CAD and design the interior around it. Just subbed, I'm off to binge the build now.
Enjoy the binge! I'll have to look into the pop2, I've been kinda let down by those style scanners before but have heard good things
Wow great job! Wish I could do something like that in CAD some day
Small steps at a time will get you there! I made a lot of mistakes trying and failing modeling this one before the finished version
@@GrindhousePerformance thank you!
Wow great design work can't wait to see that printed!!
Thank you! Working on it now!
Absolutely love this series
Hey Im glad to hear that, thanks! I'm hoping to make more progress on the console project next week.
Props for just going at it the way you did. but you should check out the 3D scanners, the Revopoint mini and POP2 scanners are good sub $1000 scanners. I'm hoping to get one soon for this kind of work too. nice work
Thank you! I'd talked myself out of the kickstarter, but I'm definitely curious how it would've performed for this. Ive demoed some higher end units and think I'll wind up getting the whole car scanned professionally
@@GrindhousePerformance Don't know if you've seen it, but Shining3D has released their Einstar 3D scanner that seems to be pretty good (and relatively cheap for its performance) for automotive scans from the reviews I've seen on it so far. Also, would like to say I love the videos! I just saw them for the first time today and have gotten motivation to start working on my Miata again finally from all your amazing work!
@@captaintank5481 hey that's awesome to hear, I'm glad I've motivated you! I'll check out the scanner when I have a chance. 👍
Can’t wait to see the final results.
Everything's printed now, just trying to figure out how to make a decent video out of it!
Great job! Can’t wait to see the finished project
Me too! So far printing has been a big headache, but slowly getting things figured out 👍
I Have a 1971 240Z that needs a complete rebuild but is 100% complete and runs. I really like the wide body kit you used and would like to go that route. Thanks for the inspiration
@@rebuildranch1225 Awesome! The widebody kit is definitely an advanced install compared to bolt ons, but I think the effort's worth it. I've still got a lot to do on the widebody to finish mounting it to the car and clean up some of the body lines / fitment issues
You need a 3d scanner. It's cool that you are doing what I've always wanted to do, and that is custom fab. I hope one day I get to have enough time to chase my dreams and design cool stuff and 3d print/make custom parts.
I'd love one! I'm not yet convinced the budget ones would work out the way I wanted. Ive got a tendency of immediately wanting to test the limits of equipment and I think I'd be let down with a scanner I can actually afford. Have been saving up though!
I've got that same amp in two of my Z31's with a 3D printed mount that locates the control pod at the front of the jockey box. I like it because i can use the line level input to retain the factory headunit and it is stealth, yet accessible. As far as how it sounds...its kinda flat but that could be very well the Rockford Fosgate R165X3's it running. I also ran a single channel amp off of the kenwood and its running a old school 8in bazooka tube in the hatch. Pretty respectable for such a small amp. Unfortunately They are discontinued now. Great work on the console design, I'm definitely learning a lot from your videos.
Dang, that's a little disappointing to hear! For the packaging of everything it worked out really, really well. I had a pretty low bar for audio quality from such a small package, so hopefully it sounds decent enough through the JL's!
Love this! I wonder, could you 3d print a traditional dashboard with funtional dials and buttons for some of these new cars with only touchscreens? An extreme example could be adding a real dashboard to a Tesla, but I'm just talking about things like a more traditional car such as a Ford explorer.
Definitely doable, but it would definitely be tough going around the body control module. So much technical stuff behind those screens 😅
@@GrindhousePerformance I've read similar things from folks who wanted to remove the entertainment console from the middle of vehicles. They are very distracting while driving and I actually cover them when I drive-it makes so much difference, especially at night! But people said re-wiring the entertainment is extremely difficult to do especially if it's tied to the temperature control.
But I wonder...if it's only the entertainment console, if you just swap in an old radio/cd player, print resin backing to make it flush against the dash, and hook the speakers up...if it's doable?....a downgrade/upgrade as it were, lol.
Great content, hopefully one day my Fusion 360 skills will be on point as yours. Great work man!
This one was a brute force project! I modeled it wrong or badly several times to get here, but I'm really happy with it. Thinking of doing some more fusion focused videos in the future
How do you not have 1+mil subscribers ? This stuff is awesome
Haha hey thanks! I don't post nearly enough to deserve 1M, but I'm excited to be getting more videos out this fall! Maybe someday! 🤘
I have a big project I am doing myself, and its nice to see how you're doing your project too. I am thinking that I shall design and make prototypes in 3D and then use those as plugs for moulds that I am hoping will become carbon fibre ... with the size of my project I think I may be biting off more than I can chew; but watching your enthusiasm is fantastic! More videos like this please!
I definitely feel the same way! Big huge prints like this get really frustrating but hopefully both of our results will be worth it. At the very least we'll learn something for next time 👍
Hope you get around to posting the build of this!
very cool stuff. Makes me want to try my own, but you left me hanging i want to see more details did a good job explaining though
Definitely didn't mean to leave so many people hanging with the project! I've been dealing with rebuilding and repairing our home after flood damage and it's made it difficult to continue making content the last few months
I was looking for a channel like this, instant sub 👍🏼
Hey thank you, I'm finally getting back into making videos again and I'm looking forward to it!
@@GrindhousePerformance thank god! Id love to see how the part turned out
That CAD drawing on Fusion 360 is GANGSTA. Well done mate.
Wish I was half as good as you @ modelling components on Fusion 360.
Can you direct me to where I can go to learn more about modelling on fusion 360 ? so I can be a wizard like you, LOL
Hey thanks so much, I really appreciate it. The best advice I can give is to just keep playing around with the software. I modeled the console probably 4 or 5 times BADLY before I was able to come up with a process that actually worked for this project. A lot of the videos I've found trying to teach the software are very basic/simple, but they don't really help solve whatever problems you're working on. I've tried to add some value where I can without it being to dry in a lot of my videos, but I've been getting asked this a lot so I might dedicate a couple videos to the topic in the future. Good luck and stick with it! It's 100% worth learning. Have a good day
I designed one for my 510, but could never get the large prints to print well. I will retry sometime in the future
I'm going through that right now. Trying to print everything in ASA and it's having a hard time printing what I thought was a pretty straightforward geometry. Going to keep trying!
@@GrindhousePerformance I was using ASA as well. It had the tendency to lift in the corners. I am planning on maybe switching to wood. It got very frustrating, I abandoned that project about 8 months ago and haven't come back to it. Also my center console is not as ambitious as yours. Good luck, and it is awesome to see you back working on the Z. Congratulations on the SEMA spotlight
@@AW_DIY_garage Thanks so much! It was surreal having the opportunity to see it on display and see people's reactions to it at the show. With enough bed temperature, an enclosure, a wide brim, and a purple gluestick I was able to get the ASA to adhere nicely to my glass bed. I'm running 95*C bed temp, and it's been enough to keep these pieces stuck for the long (very long) print cycles. I'm struggling with a lot of surface finish blemishes, pinholes, and oddities that don't present themselves until half a day into getting the print running, which is starting to get pretty frustrating but I'm going to keep trying!
impressive work dude,you show us so many different skills,mind blowing.As i think you cannot print that in one piece one of the challenges will be to fit them together without visible gaps where not intended.Keep the good work going.Greetings from germany and merry christmas.
Hey merry Christmas! Thanks for the kind words. You're exactly right, the console is going to get split into 9 separate segments and joined together. It's proving difficult. Hopefully have a video together before the end of the month showing what I'm thinking might work!
This was pretty amazing, every video im like, man I wish i could do that, the programming and the deisign work is amazing.
It's a lot of blind persistence and luck! Software's are a lot more beginner friendly than they used to be. You'll get there! 👍
@@GrindhousePerformance what software are you using?
@@karaabdelkader1273 I'm using Fusion 360 for CAD modeling and Cura for 3D Print Slicing 👍
Can't wait to see the 3d printed center console
Working on it now! Printings being a real pain 😅
Just found your channel would love to watch more.
Hey thank you! I had put my channel on the backburner dealing with our home flooding, but I'm getting back into making new videos this fall!
Hey I just came acrosss your video and Man U are a genius/talented man .. u inspire me to keep creating with with 3d printer .. hopefully one day I be close tk your level
Hey thanks! You will get there, 100%. I modeled this console probably 10 different times, badly, before sharing what worked in the video. Being consistent and persistent learning what works and what doesn't work will get you 99% of the way there, and the rest is luck! I'm thinking about doing some tips and tricks videos I'm the future. I've been penciling ideas as I've come across them
When it comes to cars, my personal weakness is 1960's and early 1970's American iron. Incorporating 3D printing into your project, is definitely something I am interested in, especially with some parts of those cars being unobtanium. I also don't know squat about CAD, so this could help maintain my interest in learning how to use it.
Im glad you've been enjoying the projects! Im planning on some CAD tips and tricks videos in the future to help people interested in getting started!
Good stuff. Nice looking design that looks like it will go well with your gauge setup. I'm still trying to learn Fusion 360, so it's cool to see the process others use.
This project seems like it would have been perfect for some sort of 3D scanner to digitally collect all of the dimensions of the trans tunnel, etc. I actually just picked up a 3DMakerPro Lynx large-format scanner as a Prime Day deal. Haven't gotten to actually play with it yet, but looking forward to being able to scan vehicle interiors and exteriors, etc. to aid in helping me design stuff for my own project cars.You should seriously consider adding some sort of 3D scanner to your arsenal.
I'm hoping the vision for the interior starts coming together as we get all the individual pieces made up. I'd LOVE to get a scanner, but I'm so torn on what kind've budget to put together for one, and setting honest expectations for what I get out of it. I'd hate to spend a couple thousand dollars on one that winds up being a paperweight when I try actually using it, but the ones I would really like are well out of my budget. I'm excited how much this industry is growing though, and am hoping for big improvements in software as the competition continues for budget friendly scanners.
@@GrindhousePerformance True. The current offerings definitely run the gamut from really cheap ($300-$400ish) to well into 5 figures. I picked up a relatively cheap one (that can do larger format scans) to play around with (was $399 on Prime day deal) to get my feet wet. Hopefully it works decently enough. Will let you know how it works when I finally have time to play with it...
@@atchipmunk definitely let me know what your experiences are like!
I’m new to your channel. A lot of fun and exciting trying new things, for sure. Where you guys located?
And are you interested in doing other projects?
I would love to see you use a 3D scanner and show us how you can use the 3D file to make the sufface adapters! 🙏
I'd absolutely love to get one! I've been pretty impressed with some recent scanners, and I think they'll only get better from here for budget/pro-sumer units
@@GrindhousePerformance yeah I feel yah man I’m in the same boat the only difference is that you actually know how to use CAD and I don’t and that is sooo frustrating for me since I got sooo much idea and can’t do shit about (expert start learning CAD which I’m gonna start soon) i’ve been working on my car for like more them a year and probably gonna need 1 more year to finish it 😫 hate my ADHD and dyslexia coz I’m always trying to find way to improve things and never finishing that I already started 😑 but I can promise you one thing! That when I’m done with the car it’s gonna be epic 😎
@@ali-sleimanchehade6129I'm very familiar with projects taking way too long LOL. A piece of advice that's helped me. Instead of considering the entire car a "project", consider each individual thing you're trying to do a project in itself. By breaking things down, at least for me, it seems at least a little less daunting. Whenever I look at the car as a whole it's easy for my mind to wander and to get overwhelmed. By focusing on specific projects, it's helped me make progress without getting too swept up in everything I have going on. You will get there with CAD. It's just time and practice. Most of what I learned was from being really persistent and trying over and over again until I figured things out. I've got a couple Fusion videos planned to help share some tricks I've learned over the years. 👍
hell yeah, i just starting to learn the 3d designing space, it is pretty cool to see it before it is built. I normally just have a bad sketch and start making stuff. I've got a guy coming to do some 3d scanning to help me design my chassis. huge learning curve. ha ha
If it doesn't start out with a bad sketch, does it even count as design? 😅 3D scanning is INTENSE, that's exciting!
@@GrindhousePerformance ha ha yea, i'm trying to force myself into the 3d world. That consul blows my mind. I do love working with fusion though, it seems somewhat easy to get my head around, and there are a lot of tutorials on youtube for it. Love watching your vids, your doing an awesome job.
@@animal_engineering thank you! Fusion works really well once you've gotten used to some of the quirks. I've broken a lot of models trying to come up with this one 😅
so clean! where is it though it's been a year
I had to put UA-cam on the backburner dealing with our home flooding. I'm looking at getting back to making videos this fall!
Just stumbled across this video, and seeing it's already a year old I can only assume (/hope) that you've bought a 3D scanner by now - would've turned this into a 10 minute operation. An hour with post-processing.
Anyway, good job pulling it off w/o one; the design of the console is nice as well.
Hey thanks, a scanner is definitely on my list for the future. Unfortunately haven't been able to buy any new tools in awhile now. Eying the einstar, was hoping for a rev2, but not so interested in the all-in-one they just released
@@GrindhousePerformance I thought they did release a new revision just recently ... was that a different model? The Einstar is on my wishlist as well. I just don't have many project going on right now that'd benefit from a new toy, so I have to pretend to be responsible with my budget for a little longer ^^
Updates? Crazy work man!
Hey thank you. I'm finally getting past the flooding repairs and have been recording for some upcoming projects!
*sees project classic car in the first frame
*immediately likes
Just found your channel, love the videos! I have a few suggestions for ya :
1) It might be worth your time to invest in a cheap 3D scanning tool to scan the amorphous body of the car. Then you can define work planes and mounting holes based off of the raw point cloud.
2) For a curvy, amorphous part, such as the center console, I'd highly recommend using surface-based modelling on the surface tab of Fusion.
3) If you're willing to pay, there is an industrial design extension (monthly sub available) that will give you an advanced patterning tool that has a TON of useful features. I'd guess that it's also way more optimized than patterning a sketch feature and having thousands of points+lines, which as you found will often crash Fusion lol.
Wow thanks for taking the time with your comments here, there's a lot of great advice. I'm not sold yet on a budget scanner. Ive been saving to get the whole car professionally scanned instead of having me fight or struggle with a budget unit. I've demoed some in the 10,000$ range where the software was still kinda crap, and I can't imagine the 1-2,000$ units are truthfully there yet.
I've watched tutorials on the surface modeling in fusion and totally forgot that wouldve been an option for modeling the console. I should spend more time learning the software because I'd guess body panels would also be much easier to model this way.
Do you have any other extensions you recommend? This is an avenue within fusion360 that I'm totally unaware of but would be interested in exploring or recording videos for.
Thanks again for putting the time into your explanations here, I'm glad you found my videos!
Someone might have mentioned this already, but regarding the speakers. Are they supposed to be woofers or midtone?
You should consider adding a divider in the middle (if space?) to prevent the movement of the membrane to act upon each other.
I originally planned to isolate the speakers in their own compartments with vented chambers and everything, but packaging got to be really tight/complicated. Maybe in a future revision if these sound terrible. I'm keeping my expectations low with sound quality, but will definitely be better than what came out of the car! You're 100% right though
@GrindhousePE you could wire them out of phase with each other, so when the left side expand, the right contract.
(If you plan to use them as lo range/woofers).
I'm so excited for the update to the video! Are you going to leave the 3d plastic exposed or put something over it like alcantara?
Since it's getting printed in a bunch of smaller pieces at minimum it's going to get sanded and painted. I've been interested in possibly wrapping it but I'm not sure yet. Getting the pieces printed properly has been a whole can of worms 😅
Nice. I am not a Black belt in 3D design but I love this. I hope some day it will become easier wit Ai. And I can just upload the scan of somthing and then instruct through terminal ! Then a world of creativity will blossom for everyone 😊
Believe me when I say I had probably modeled the console 4-5 times incorrectly before I finally was able to get it to work; I'm definitely still learning as well. I'm very excited for AI being more attainable for CAD modeling, it does exist today as 'generative design' and it's pretty wild what it's able to do. Just excited to see it become more entry level friendly!
@@GrindhousePerformance you did amazingly! You are a skilled craftsman. And creative. I will follow your process and look forward for next video :)
Subscribing based off this video alone. Can’t wait to see the finished product.
Thank you for subscribing! I've got a pile of parts here now and working on filming and editing the build out
Have you considered a 3d scanner for some of the future projects? Would have made designing around the awkwardly shaped trans tunnel, etc., a bit easier.
@@MrSlim1225 I'd love to get one someday. There's so many softwares and options now and the tech seems to be really improving at the entry level. I don't know whether the ones I can actually afford would be good enough yet for these kinds of projects or if it'd just turn into an expensive paperweight. 😅
Very nice job! Could you share what wall thickness you went with on the console shell both inside and out of the pockets?
6mm for the main body, 3.2mm (4 walls x 0.8mm nozzle) for the pocketed sections 👍 thanks!
@@GrindhousePerformance thank you
Can you give a breakdown of the cost of send cut send parts how you designed stuff for them ect. Also what are you printing in ? Do you have concerns about temps reaching the glass temp of your filament after completion?
Hey sure; the 1/8" steel framing parts ran roughly $200, the top aluminum covers were $45, the titanium pieces were about $20 bucks total. I had SendCutSend powder coat the aluminum mesh panels on the top and sides, as well as the brackets for the speakers, and those pieces cut and coated were ~ $180. I'm printing the console in multiple pieces out of ASA. ASA should be resistant enough, I have seen it used successfully in engine bays, but like most things on my channel, it's still an experiment that I'm trying to learn from. We'll have to see how it holds up! Hope this all helps!
@@GrindhousePerformance very helpful I'm learning so much from what you're doing. I do car stuff. I do 3d printing but the way youre combining them is like why didn't I think of this.
@@Phil4222 It's a lot of experimentation! Being totally honest I don't really know how much of this stuff will work out the way I hope it does. I just want to try and learn and share whatever I can. 3D printing is a really exciting technology to me and I want to show people it can be so much more than making toys and widgets
Been meaning to 3d print my own center console but couldn’t figure out a good way to start. I like your approach with small and quick templates to datum and do from there. What version of f360 are you using? It seems my student/hobbyist free version can barely load a sketch at this point . Having the same issues with patterns as you. The throttling is hardcore
Im using the step above the student version, I needed it for exporting the laser cutting files if I remember correctly. My issues wound up being hardware related, the PC I started this project on was ~8 years old and couldn't handle it
hay. i know this vid is old. but canu do a follow up on the audio side of this car? idl ove to know how it came out sounding to you. and what things u mightve wanted to do differently in retrospective. love audio stuff, especially custom audio stuff
Great job man! This video could have been called ‘why I need a 3D scanner’😂
LOL, yeah seriously. I'd love to get one someday
You’re a hell of a modeller sir
What wasn't shown in the video was the 30 something hours spent modeling it all the wrong ways before I finally got things right, hahaha. Glad you liked it!
I just found your channel and subbed instantly. I hope you come back to this project. I know life gets busy. Im SUPER interested in this as im building a 240sx time attack car at the moment (no...im not your average fuck boi with a 240...fyi)
Hey thank you, I'm glad you've been into watching my projects. I had to take a step away from UA-cam the last few months to deal with storm and flooding damage. I've slowly been getting back into recording in the shop but you're 100% right, life gets into the way and sometimes it's tough as hell getting back into the swing of things after being gone for so long. Love 240's, wish they were still affordable haha. Cool to see one set up for grip
Great work. I'd suggest adding a slight angle to where the speakers mount so they are at least facing towards you a little bit for better sound imaging.
😎👍👍
I'm surprised nobody else said this, you're 100% right. The pedal box is really cramped and will only get worse with the roll cage coming in. The console hangs over the corners of the tunnel so clearance wpuldve been tough without a total redesign. The audiophile in me is bothered, but with how loud the cars going to be the speakers are almost just for show 🤣🤣
I tried to do patterns similar for a custom speaker grill. I couldn't figure it out :(. very nice work
I so need to learn Fusion 360 .. I am really comfortable with Sketchup but Fusion 360 is a beast .. wow .. great work
It's a very good software for how accessible it is! I would definitely recommend it to anyone watching my videos 👍
very cool I took 3d animation at Vancouver film school using Maya design software ,like to design dash parts for c4 corvettes, as they have too much of that cheap plastic panels and trim parts.anyhow vey good video
That's awesome, I've looked locally for some classes to learn Maya, blender, etc.
Man... giving me a great thing to do to play with my 3d scanner and printers. 😂 Itd be fun to make a better, more custom console, have extra space for my smokes and the drink the wife usually has, etc
Haha I love that 👌 gotta get me a scanner some day
Great vids man. Did you consider photogrammetry or even acquiring a lidar equipped apple device to map your models around?
Used it for car wrapping in the past and was very effective.
Keep up the great work.
PS, Haven't finished vid yet, so apologies if you come up with this later...
I've watched some videos on photogrammetry and am really interested in giving it a shot sometime. More softwares and things to learn 😅 but it looks really effective. I'd love to get a scanner someday too but I don't think the entry level ones are really worth much
Dude, you should have 2Mio subscribers .. awesome info, awesome presentation, fantastic cinematography and super creative content! Subb'd
Wow that's really kind to say! People have been sharing my videos like crazy lately, so maybe some day!
thanks for amazing video! What is a wall thickness? Which plastic will you use? I didn't catch it.
Hey thank you! The pocketed sections of the console are 3.2mm thick (makes it 4 easy lines with a 0.8mm nozzle). The thicker ribbed areas are 6mm. I'm using ASA as the filament for the console.
@@GrindhousePerformance noted, thanks. In my old car I intended to printout a new console by ABS plastic. But it stay a dream only, and I sold my car as is.
This is AMAZING. You are a CAD Wizard. OK well maybe not, i don't know, but you are compared to me! I need to see how this turned out!?
Everything's printed, I'm working on filming everything and getting the pieces joined together! Hopefully soon, project got sidelined way longer than I thought it would.
I dig your work but am wondering about heat after you cut away the tunnel. Could that melt the print?
It's certainly possible. There's still going to be metal separating the tunnel and the console technically has an air gap everywhere it isn't mounted to the tunnel. I figure I'll give it a try this way and if it warps I'll look at using the model to make a composite version
That’s wicked! You can tell it’s for a Datsun because there’s no cup holders!
People keep asking me why the parking brakes on the passenger side, as though my shoulder isn't also on the passenger side in this thing 🤣🤣
This is great work! I'd love to see more like it! I am definitely subscribing!
Hey thanks for subscribing! Im trying to get another video on the console out this week! 👍
Dude! Where is the finished product? You left me hanging!!!
Haha I'm sorry! Everything's printed, I'm working on filming everything and getting the pieces joined together! Hopefully soon, project got sidelined way longer than I thought it would.
Hi @@GrindhousePerformance !, I'm still sitting on the edge of my seat waiting to see the end of the project...
To create a 3d print like that do you have to make it in small pieces and glue it together? Also how did you learn to to use the software to customize and make your design?
Yeah it's going to be broken up into several pieces and joined together. I'm actually finally printing it now for part 2 😅. I went to engineering school, but I mostly learned CAD from messing around with it. I find it really enjoyable to learn and practice
Thats sick bro.
This is great! No armrest or armrest storage?
Thank you! I should have added more of an armrest and storage. By the time I started filming I had a couple weeks trying and failing at CAD to get this together the way I wanted and didn't put a lot of thought into extra features. Maybe in rev2.0!