The Probe Droid Resin Kit Instructions Tread

Oooooh no. I'm not dipping into my Matildas and Karls for this one, as I will do that for the scratch build! This thread is for solving the parts puzzle and making instructions, so I'm thinking these pieces should be included off the bat....

I can send them to Mike for casting of course, but I want to hear from David and Mike first. Maybe they already have them?
 
Also - am I making something up for the under-the-gun-turret area? As it stands, there's nothing to put under there, and something needs to fit in that space.
 
Still looking for that Jason, well, havent for a while, but i have a few hunches i need to follow up on, just need the energy to drag the kits down from thew shelves TBH.

lee
 
I don't mean to speak for Dave, but I think the plan was to use a little of the extra brass that comes with the kit (J yours didn't have that because it came straight from me) as a stand in. I was not even aware that there was something under that part until about 1/2 way thru the molding and casting.

I think the plan is to use some of that brass as a stand in and if we can find the part i will mold it and cast up some to send out to everyone.

mike
 
Mike - I'll do that in the instructions then, thanks!

Dave - There's one leg that I think needs one more part - am confirming this evening!
 
And those dimensions from corner to corner will still fit inside the neck area between body and head? If I'm calculating right, we need a clearance of just around 4.25" for it to fit inside the neck area.
 
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The 3" square was the one I was eyeballing. It's all going to hide inside the 4-ish" neck any way, so it won't matter, I think? I'll be hogging out the resin and replacing with acrylic anyway. Pre cut to house the servo and bearing assembly... that's the loose plan.
 
I just meant if you measure the lazy susan diagonally from corner to corner, it measures out to about 4.25" Rather than 3" Just a heads up. I don't have the model here at home so I can't measure to see if it's got that much clearance. Worst case we can cut the corners off the lazy susan. :)
 
Aslo, I plan to draft a lasercut neck assembly to work with the head servo Jim Shima recommended. I am also thinking this would be a good bearing ring to use?

Low Profile Lazy Susans - Rockler Woodworking Tools

Jason et al,

I do not know this specific product, but my experience with other - albeit way larger - turntable bearings is they ask for a good amount of energy to rotate (and the 200 lbs. (weight) rating indicates this one is equally constructed)... Possibly too much for a standard servo?

Cheers,
Falk
 
Aslo, I plan to draft a lasercut neck assembly to work with the head servo Jim Shima recommended. I am also thinking this would be a good bearing ring to use?

Low Profile Lazy Susans - Rockler Woodworking Tools

What do you guys think? I will offer the laser cut parts to jive with the servo and the bearing assembly - which ever we all decide on.

Jason, did you pick up any/either of the turntables I reco'd from wonderfest? I'm not doing the resin, but rather the scratch -- same size either way. Wondering if one I picked up will work.
 
Jason et al,

I do not know this specific product, but my experience with other - albeit way larger - turntable bearings is they ask for a good amount of energy to rotate (and the 200 lbs. (weight) rating indicates this one is equally constructed)... Possibly too much for a standard servo?

Cheers,
Falk

Maybe I'm misunderstanding what you're saying -- but the "rating" is the MAXIMUM load that the table/bearings will operate properly. Not the load it takes to rotate. I have similar turntables as these and they rotate with the same easy that a lazy susan turns in your kitchen cabinets -- very little effort. Rotating effort only increases with the increase of the seated load increasing.
 
Quincy - I missed that, rats!

So any one recommend a turntable? I'd like to order something so I can get cracking!
 
Are you familiar with Berkey System stuff like this?

750 Rotational Bearing Insert | | Berkey System

I use there stuff on camera rigs and i've seen a lot of effects guys build mechanical rigs with them. They have pretty tight tolerances generally, so you might get away from some of the "wobble" that could be inherent in a consumer lazy susan.
 
I was just browsing bearings this afternoon and saw that same thing and thought it would be great for this project. Nice and compact. :)
 
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