Since 3D printers are getting pretty affordable, I was wondering if anyone has considered how to leverage their capability in your projects? While I don't have the CAD skills, tools or knowledge to do this myself, here are some broad ideas I was thinking of:
Complex, multi-part waveform guides - These would have been impossible to create yourself prior to 3D printing. Given the size of 3D printers is limited, larger enclosures would need to be printed in multiple parts.
Complex diffussion faceplates/speaker surrounds
Complex internal baffles
Complex porting methods
Anyone else have many ideas? All I can find on teh googles is iphone horns and other small stuff.
Complex, multi-part waveform guides - These would have been impossible to create yourself prior to 3D printing. Given the size of 3D printers is limited, larger enclosures would need to be printed in multiple parts.
Complex diffussion faceplates/speaker surrounds
Complex internal baffles
Complex porting methods
Anyone else have many ideas? All I can find on teh googles is iphone horns and other small stuff.
I have used stereo lithography quite a bit in the past for tweeter mounting plates, waveguides of relatively small size that I can screw onto a specific tweeter, odd shaped driver trim rings to French the transition to the baffle surface to avoid making a routing jig and also terminal plates that actually have the right number of terminals I need and fit the material I am using. I have access to some machines and run them for material cost only since I do all the modeling myself. I have sent some of my design models out for bid on more than one occasion and the bids I got back were very cost prohibitive for me. I know the material costs because I do SLA and the machine cost to do simple parts say up to 8” X 10” is anywhere from 10-50K so for the most part most SLA companies charge exorbitantly high prices because they deal in R&D prototyping for large companies that have a budget that can be re-cooped in production runs once the product is finalized. There may be companies out there that do small one-off runs efficiently but I have not found any.
What would the cost be like for i.e. an ordinary 18 cm waveguide?
I have made them (8") for $6.00 in material and the run time for each part was 12hrs. The same part was quoted to me twice from 2 different companies to do a 6 piece run @ $600, and $1150 for the run.
Here is something fairly large and complex made out of pieces from a makerbot ($2200)
Cosmo Wenman's Mind-Blowing Sculpture Made On A MakerBot
Cosmo Wenman's Mind-Blowing Sculpture Made On A MakerBot
3D Horn printing
It should be possible to print a horn like. The maths can't be that complicated and it would be fun. I have no access nor experience with this technology but it is fascinating to ponder the possibilities. What material to choose would already be way outside my competence.
Anybody out there who has already given it a go or wants to try?
It should be possible to print a horn like. The maths can't be that complicated and it would be fun. I have no access nor experience with this technology but it is fascinating to ponder the possibilities. What material to choose would already be way outside my competence.
Anybody out there who has already given it a go or wants to try?
I saw an idea posted on the Hewlett Packard/Agilent Yahoo Group -- use 3d printing to lay down etch resistant PCB traces!
By the same token one could take an aluminum panel and via "negative" printing mask all but the lettering you wanted, then etch the lettering or patterns.
By the same token one could take an aluminum panel and via "negative" printing mask all but the lettering you wanted, then etch the lettering or patterns.
I'm thinking about building a sort of poor man's Elipson 4260.
Elipson - 4260
The midrange+tweeter part would be a good candidate for 3D printing.
A perfect sphere on the outside and a structure with a minimum of standing waves on the inside, divided by a gab filled with sand. That's my idea so far.
Also, it would be super sexy to make it out of this stuff:
Carbon Fiber Reinforced PLA ? PROTO-PASTA
Elipson - 4260
The midrange+tweeter part would be a good candidate for 3D printing.
A perfect sphere on the outside and a structure with a minimum of standing waves on the inside, divided by a gab filled with sand. That's my idea so far.
Also, it would be super sexy to make it out of this stuff:
Carbon Fiber Reinforced PLA ? PROTO-PASTA
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