Yes really high quality content in and of itself but the fact you have shared the files too got me tipping my hat **really** hard. Thanks mang. Wish all the internet was this good.
Thanks man :) Appreciate the support, I do have to get around to printing another good one for my other speaker haha, the prototype is starting to crumple lol.
Hahaha yeah man 🤙 I went real deep on making my first smart device. Spent like a month learning how to code a custom login system for Google 🤣 ua-cam.com/video/_ldr68pru4M/v-deo.html
Hi, I want to thank you for this video and awesome clever design, we printed this for white bookshelf speakers at tv stand and it looks just perfect, one of the most fascinating design in the living room now and sound is much nicer! For reference settings: printer that used is Creality K1, filament is white color Creality Hyper PLA , 220 °C, 200mm/s, %80-100 fan speed, without supports but with brim (just in case), very close to none visible sagging
Great to hear you printed them and have them setup in your living room! I am yet to test a pair made from PLA, I've always tried flexible filaments. Thanks for sharing your settings 🤙
Yeah for sure, any speakers that aren't floor standing can do well with some surface separation. I guess it also depends on how loud you're playing and if anything rattles. I know my home theatre speakers rattle the plaster on the walls haha!
Its $40 a roll of the filament, and I think it was about half a roll in the end. As for current model, I managed to put 11kg/24lb ontop and it didn't crumple 👍 I'm fixing some things on my 3D printer for better reliability, will then try create a version that uses less filament!
No supports, but I'm having trouble this time around with TPU to get a nice finish. In the past I used PLAFlex which was a unique blend but that supplier no longer sells it.
The tutorial really took it most of the way. From there I spent a lot of time tweaking the randomisation and then manually pushing and pulling the vertices it produced. I had hoped it'd all be randomly generated, but it took a lot of manual work. Main tip would be to try and make the "overhang" parts as pointy as possible, so the holes are more water droplet-shaped 💧, this makes it easier to 3D print with minimal bridging. A lot of it was trial and error until eventually, the final product looked something like what I wanted. Then as you see in the end, manually sculpting the top edges to be thicker. And chopping off the base to have a flat surface. Good luck 😄🤙
Oh good question! I haven't tested it's crumple load as I have minimal flexible filament left and it doesn't always go back to its true shape after being stretched. My speakers (Mackie MR5MKIII) are 5.5kg/12lb and that's held well. I sat the other speaker on top of each other and it held the now 11kg/24lb weight vertically fine, issue is it sweys being quite top heavy at that point haha.
A lot of filament tuning, but unfortunately, the PLAFlex I used originally turns brittle over time and breaks. And trying to reprint with TPU has not been as clean. I've just got a new Bamblabs X1C to test, so I'm hoping it can pull off a new pair with their TPU.
@@camshand I have a P1S and I really struggle printing this design in PolyFlex TPU90, without supports. But supports are no option for this print imo. Overhangs and bridges are really tough for me. I guess I have to tune the filament a bit more. In worst case I am considering printing this from a hard material and potentially add TPU feet/rims
Yes really high quality content in and of itself but the fact you have shared the files too got me tipping my hat **really** hard. Thanks mang. Wish all the internet was this good.
Thanks man :) Appreciate the support, I do have to get around to printing another good one for my other speaker haha, the prototype is starting to crumple lol.
This guy really went in, going to look at the rest of your videos too now. you had me when you imported everything into an excel sheet lmaooo
Hahaha yeah man 🤙 I went real deep on making my first smart device. Spent like a month learning how to code a custom login system for Google 🤣 ua-cam.com/video/_ldr68pru4M/v-deo.html
High quality content
Keep up the good work!
That is super cool! Awesome video man! Definitely a sub.
Wow, that's a really good design 🤙
Thank you, I'm quite pleased that it's able to hold the speakers weight and work 😊
Hi, I want to thank you for this video and awesome clever design, we printed this for white bookshelf speakers at tv stand and it looks just perfect, one of the most fascinating design in the living room now and sound is much nicer!
For reference settings: printer that used is Creality K1, filament is white color Creality Hyper PLA , 220 °C, 200mm/s, %80-100 fan speed, without supports but with brim (just in case), very close to none visible sagging
Great to hear you printed them and have them setup in your living room!
I am yet to test a pair made from PLA, I've always tried flexible filaments.
Thanks for sharing your settings 🤙
Great content, informative and entertaining!
wow this is impressive!!
I was super surprised by the vibration test results, glad I persisted with flexible filament :)
Thanks for sharing this video !
Appreciate you watching it Abdo, one of my favourite projects of all time 😊👍
Good stuff, recently bought Sonos Five and thinking of something like this.
Yeah for sure, any speakers that aren't floor standing can do well with some surface separation. I guess it also depends on how loud you're playing and if anything rattles.
I know my home theatre speakers rattle the plaster on the walls haha!
What infill and wall count did you use? Im using 95a filament.
SWEET! How much?! I need some for my studio upgrades. Also, what's the weight capacity on the ones you have? Nice work yet again!
Its $40 a roll of the filament, and I think it was about half a roll in the end.
As for current model, I managed to put 11kg/24lb ontop and it didn't crumple 👍
I'm fixing some things on my 3D printer for better reliability, will then try create a version that uses less filament!
Would you be willing to share the speaker stand design? These are sick!
did you print these with supports?
No supports, but I'm having trouble this time around with TPU to get a nice finish. In the past I used PLAFlex which was a unique blend but that supplier no longer sells it.
Hey man, can you share some tricks you learned medeling this besides the video mentioned?
The tutorial really took it most of the way.
From there I spent a lot of time tweaking the randomisation and then manually pushing and pulling the vertices it produced.
I had hoped it'd all be randomly generated, but it took a lot of manual work.
Main tip would be to try and make the "overhang" parts as pointy as possible, so the holes are more water droplet-shaped 💧, this makes it easier to 3D print with minimal bridging.
A lot of it was trial and error until eventually, the final product looked something like what I wanted.
Then as you see in the end, manually sculpting the top edges to be thicker. And chopping off the base to have a flat surface.
Good luck 😄🤙
This is awesome! Looks really good man. What weight will your current design support without crumpling?
Oh good question!
I haven't tested it's crumple load as I have minimal flexible filament left and it doesn't always go back to its true shape after being stretched.
My speakers (Mackie MR5MKIII) are 5.5kg/12lb and that's held well. I sat the other speaker on top of each other and it held the now 11kg/24lb weight vertically fine, issue is it sweys being quite top heavy at that point haha.
How did you print this without supports?
A lot of filament tuning, but unfortunately, the PLAFlex I used originally turns brittle over time and breaks. And trying to reprint with TPU has not been as clean.
I've just got a new Bamblabs X1C to test, so I'm hoping it can pull off a new pair with their TPU.
@@camshand I have a P1S and I really struggle printing this design in PolyFlex TPU90, without supports.
But supports are no option for this print imo.
Overhangs and bridges are really tough for me. I guess I have to tune the filament a bit more.
In worst case I am considering printing this from a hard material and potentially add TPU feet/rims
What are the speakers?
Mackie MR5 MKIII Studio Monitors, I've had them for about 10 years now, still going strong 🤙
Future me: "When I subscribed to cam shand he only had 7.2k subs"
Too kind Darren 🥰 glad to have you onboard for the journey!