BingoMaru
Well-Known Member
This is a dream project for me, ever since seeing the film as a kid in the early 90's. And thankfully, with programs like CAD and zbrush, and the accessibility of home 3D printers, it's now becoming a reality.
This started off as a fantastic file bought on Etsy from one of our fellow members here, Kiwimaddog. Highly recommend it. But, I wanted to tweak it, and bring it that much closer to accuracy, so I loaded the file into zbrush and began. First I shortened the length of the face by a few percentage points, then I slightly smoothed out the shape of the eyes at the top arc. Then, I extended the air inlets on the top of the head, on either side of the fin. Then, I reshaped the lower ridge on the sides to terminate to a point. And finally, I digitally resculpted the weld lines. Then to get it to fit on my printer, I sliced off the back half of the fin.
Printed on my CR-10S in ABS, with a 0.12 layer height and 33% infill. Took about 4 days. Once the helmet and fin were printed, I glued the fin to the helmet using a thick ABS slurry paste I made by melting the filament in acetone, to create a very strong weld, much like when using weld on with styrene. Layers of primer and filler, with rounds of 3M spot putty, as brought me to this. Oh, and I used actual brass WW2 rivets around the eyes.
I'm going to be molding it and casting it in Smooth On's 65D impact resistant resin this coming week. If anyone is interested, I can start an interest list soon. But anyways, here is where I am on this project.
This started off as a fantastic file bought on Etsy from one of our fellow members here, Kiwimaddog. Highly recommend it. But, I wanted to tweak it, and bring it that much closer to accuracy, so I loaded the file into zbrush and began. First I shortened the length of the face by a few percentage points, then I slightly smoothed out the shape of the eyes at the top arc. Then, I extended the air inlets on the top of the head, on either side of the fin. Then, I reshaped the lower ridge on the sides to terminate to a point. And finally, I digitally resculpted the weld lines. Then to get it to fit on my printer, I sliced off the back half of the fin.
Printed on my CR-10S in ABS, with a 0.12 layer height and 33% infill. Took about 4 days. Once the helmet and fin were printed, I glued the fin to the helmet using a thick ABS slurry paste I made by melting the filament in acetone, to create a very strong weld, much like when using weld on with styrene. Layers of primer and filler, with rounds of 3M spot putty, as brought me to this. Oh, and I used actual brass WW2 rivets around the eyes.
I'm going to be molding it and casting it in Smooth On's 65D impact resistant resin this coming week. If anyone is interested, I can start an interest list soon. But anyways, here is where I am on this project.