ligonap
Active Member
Hello together!
I didn't want to believe it at first. Here is the orthogonal direct comparison of the DC-17m and DC-15s from the game data (no manipulation, no perspective view):
As a part of my RC building, I also have modeled an almost accurate DC-15s pistol by using SolidWorks.
Dimension: 35.2 x 20.8 x 6.3 cm (13.85 x 8.19 x 2.48 inch) !!
The DC-15s is unbelievable huge.
For a test I generated a Pepakura file and assembled the paper model.
After the Pepakura test I got the seven 3D-printed main parts (in polyamide) from VisioTech:
For the paint job four layers were applied: Primer - Silver Rim - clear coat - Black silk mat
After the painting job, I have divided the electronic components of the blaster into modules.
The board is the heart of the blasters:
The board is powered by 9V and can play 1000 8-bit WAV files from a MicroSD card.
To get a shooting-feedback, I have installed a vibration module:
The motor is from a PS2 controller.
For the power-on lamp I used a blue 8mm-360°-LED.
The blue muzzle LED (Luxeon 3Watt) and the speaker are mounted in a common module:
Before reassembling everything looked like this:
The energy and VU-display consist of eight blue SMD LEDs:
The blaster now looks like this:
I have uploaded a longer video clip (about 17 minutes) about the assembly and functionality (15:42 min) on my Youtube channel:
DC-15s side arm blaster - YouTube
I didn't want to believe it at first. Here is the orthogonal direct comparison of the DC-17m and DC-15s from the game data (no manipulation, no perspective view):
As a part of my RC building, I also have modeled an almost accurate DC-15s pistol by using SolidWorks.
Dimension: 35.2 x 20.8 x 6.3 cm (13.85 x 8.19 x 2.48 inch) !!
The DC-15s is unbelievable huge.
For a test I generated a Pepakura file and assembled the paper model.
After the Pepakura test I got the seven 3D-printed main parts (in polyamide) from VisioTech:
For the paint job four layers were applied: Primer - Silver Rim - clear coat - Black silk mat
After the painting job, I have divided the electronic components of the blaster into modules.
The board is the heart of the blasters:
The board is powered by 9V and can play 1000 8-bit WAV files from a MicroSD card.
To get a shooting-feedback, I have installed a vibration module:
The motor is from a PS2 controller.
For the power-on lamp I used a blue 8mm-360°-LED.
The blue muzzle LED (Luxeon 3Watt) and the speaker are mounted in a common module:
Before reassembling everything looked like this:
The energy and VU-display consist of eight blue SMD LEDs:
The blaster now looks like this:
I have uploaded a longer video clip (about 17 minutes) about the assembly and functionality (15:42 min) on my Youtube channel:
DC-15s side arm blaster - YouTube
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