Thank you for your videos! I do not have an engineering degree but I am lucky enough to work as a structures engineer at an aerospace company. I often reference your videos on GD&T for help while making tooling. You have a great way of explaining things that works with how I learn. Thank you!
Hey, i really like your video. Material testing is a very interesting topic. Maybe DIC (digital image correlation) is an option for measuring the elongation and could solve your problem. There is a commercial software called GOM correlate. The 2D version is free. CNC-Kitchen also has a video about tensile testing of 3D printed samples. In the video Stefan is using point trackers in the software blender to calculate the elongation. Hope you find this helpful :)
Hey im building my truck to be better off road and i noticed you have some long travel springs on the bronco, what are those? i have a 93 150 and a 78 f150, i love your bronco and i would really love to have some nice springs like yours. i assume you also used longer shocks. thanks!
Have you thought about doing metal casting using the 3D printed parts as molds? I tried to do it a while back not only to save time with machining, but also because I didn't have the tools to do the machining. I didn't work for me, but that's because I didn't have the right equipment (charcoal didn't quite cut it). I've seen a lot of other people do it successfully on UA-cam though. It seems like a nice middle ground between being able to get a part that is quite strong and that has a nice surface finish with accurate tolerances needing only a little bit of post processing without having to spend the full time required to machine a part from scratch from a full block.
Thank you for your videos! I do not have an engineering degree but I am lucky enough to work as a structures engineer at an aerospace company. I often reference your videos on GD&T for help while making tooling. You have a great way of explaining things that works with how I learn. Thank you!
What’s the e notepad you r using?
I came to ask the exact same thing
F
Looks like the reMarkable 2
First thought: that's nice!
Yes, Remarkable 2
Knowing how things break is the first step to not breaking things
Hey, i really like your video. Material testing is a very interesting topic. Maybe DIC (digital image correlation) is an option for measuring the elongation and could solve your problem. There is a commercial software called GOM correlate. The 2D version is free. CNC-Kitchen also has a video about tensile testing of 3D printed samples. In the video Stefan is using point trackers in the software blender to calculate the elongation. Hope you find this helpful :)
Great insight, thanks!
Hey im building my truck to be better off road and i noticed you have some long travel springs on the bronco, what are those? i have a 93 150 and a 78 f150, i love your bronco and i would really love to have some nice springs like yours. i assume you also used longer shocks. thanks!
Those leaf springs were on it when I got it 20 years ago. It was in bad shape, no idea where they came from. Def not stock though.
Have you thought about doing metal casting using the 3D printed parts as molds? I tried to do it a while back not only to save time with machining, but also because I didn't have the tools to do the machining. I didn't work for me, but that's because I didn't have the right equipment (charcoal didn't quite cut it). I've seen a lot of other people do it successfully on UA-cam though. It seems like a nice middle ground between being able to get a part that is quite strong and that has a nice surface finish with accurate tolerances needing only a little bit of post processing without having to spend the full time required to machine a part from scratch from a full block.
Why is this channel not called QUINTinue?
00:28-00:35 Please elaborate.