Hello guys,
I'm caught up on the 2 new shrouds, need to machine the round corners for the Barbican/cast versions on them now!
Now, to be clear, the kits for now will not include MPP clamps, but I'm testing the waters to see what's out there. So, I received clamps from the custom saber shop, and they are not great. The black finish is ok, much better than some photos I had seen, so that's ok, the shape is not super accurate, neither is the lever and obviously the side bars are not the proper color for our purpose but are a complete miss in shape as well. I'm going to try to machine accurate side bars for those two but that's all I can do for them i think.
I'm going as fast as I can to finish those prototypes and open the interest thread and I'm hoping that Roman can help bring a batch of MPP clamps with his next batch of hilts but I haven't contacted him yet as I have no numbers at all to give him yet.
alright, now, I spent today working on the activation greebly,
I'm going to need your help determine if that's ok or not. I'm very hard on my work and those make no exception, they are resin printed and I have managed to improve the result quite a bit today, but I'm not sure this is good enough yet.
my wife wants to try to lightly airbrush some varnish on them to bring the whole thing together and maybe make them look closer to the actual part that i think was painted. So I guess we will try that and see if that looks good. In any case, it will be your choice to paint the part when assembling the kit.
and my last solution, I can prep a few of those very nicelly and my wife can try to cast them in resin instead of the slightly post processed resin prints. No certainty of outcome on this and it has a slightly heavy cost to try as they need to be mastered, moulded and cast.
the pros:
- they are made by me so I can control the result
- printing them from shapeways is around 12€ per part so it really adds a lot to the overall price of the kit, here they are basically free, I think I can print around 10 of them per batch and they take 30 minutes, they have no supports to remove, so no time lost on this and no wasted material at all.
- seen from the top, they are absolutely great!
- the result is extremely accurate in shape and dimensions to my matched 3D model and the original part.
the cons:
- I am postprocessing the sides quickly by sanding them against a sanding bar, then polishing quickly with mother mag and washing them with a toothbrush. It takes only a couple minute per part but still, it is postprocessing and the sides don't look "industrial" because of this
- when left raw, there are some white/grey traces on the parts, apparently due to the sanding/washing process
- there are a few printing layers visible on the inside walls when photographed with a macro lens
here are some photos, it's really hard because the parts looks rather good to the naked eye and they can look less good when taking a photo, depending on lighting and zoom.
the worst first, those are taken from a bit of distance and a not so great lighting with my normal phone lens:
here, some visible white residue on the sides:
now, in those photos, i think it looks really great, it has a really authentic, vintage look, i couldn't hope for better than that...
here is where we are now:
and some close ups:
so yeah, i don't really know what to think, and
I'm really keen on any feedback on what you guys think for those parts.
thank you!
cheers