Re: 1:1 Wall-E Build (WIP) - Gear Assembly Complete!
Oh Man... That is a thing of beauty! Dang... your workbench is clean...
Oh Man... That is a thing of beauty! Dang... your workbench is clean...
Thanks!Oh Man... That is a thing of beauty! Dang... your workbench is clean...
Thanks!Wow!
The gear looks so real and high-quality, great!
Btw, genius solution with the workbench and the vacuum!![]()
Yeah, it's amazing how big he is. If you re-watch the movie you actually see he is pretty big relative the people, but he does create the impression of being much smaller.Wow! He's huge cor
Exactly how tall is he supposed to be? I know he is bigger than most expect, but I am working on an Eve and am curious what scale I am building her at. She is about 3' when complete.
-Eric
I'm sure you have the same experience with your R2 -hard to wrap your brain around how big he is until you actually are next to one.I have also always though of Wall-E as a smaller robot than this, but now I realize how big he actually is!
About how wide is Wall-E, including the gears? And, great work once again!![]()
Hey SB,
I've been out of pocket for a while... MAN-O-MAN! Wall-E looks AWESOME! The treadwork is fantastic! We'll definately need to get a pic of him with R2 in front of the Pit - they are all related now.
Looking forward to more!
Great work! I see we have the same band saw. Any luck finding blades outside of Sears?
What would the treads be made from if he was mobile? Rubber or some kind of metal?
Progress looks good.
-Eric
Thanks for the compliment. Since I built Wall-E with the intention of keeping him static, I haven't done any research on what would be required to have mobile treads. Anyone know what snow mobile treads are made from?What would the treads be made from if he was mobile? Rubber or some kind of metal?
Progress looks good.
-Eric
Thanks!Amazing!
Thanks for the assist. Here's the video you're referring to specific to a mobile (and incredibly cool) Wall-E.I saw another guy who made a functional Wall-E and he casted the tracks from some kind of rubber in a mold who took 6 pieces at the time. Not sure if it was rubber, but it was some sort of soft plastic.
If the tracks are made of metal it takes quite a machine to make it move and it would probably weigh at least 50 pounds more+ metal tracks are hugly expensive.
Snow builder:
You're doing great, and that's a whole lot of tracks. Looks like you have given quite an effort to get it done, and it seems like it was worth it. Looks awesome!
How do you keep track on them?
Alright, a silly pun...
How are getting those 90 degree cuts on the inside with a bandsaw? Are you cutting the inside corners round first then going back and squaring off once the main chunk of material is gone?