🎸3D PRINTED GUITAR!!! 🎸
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- Опубликовано: 14 фев 2019
- Hey all! Welcome to the first ever “Friday For What”. Todays episode is a bit different than my normal content and don’t you worry, next week we’ll be getting back to the regularly scheduled robot shenanigans such as the balancing car project.
Custom Plasma Creations:
www.customplasmacreations.com
More 3D printed guitar playing:
Some Idiot playing a 3D printed guitar
• Some Idiot playing a 3...
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Where you can buy a 3D Printer: goo.gl/gwKB6J
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I post most of my designs on thingiverse
www.thingiverse.com/Gear_Down...
Credit to the designer of the guitar:
www.thingiverse.com/thing:317...
Pickguard from Amazon:
amzn.to/2X4a39U
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PLA, ABS, Nylon, PET... Let the tone wars begin!
Forget tone wood, it's time for tone plastic!
Nylon
plastic tone war
But is the PLA aged?
PBT is the rosewood of plastics.
"Let's start with the less structural part, where the bridge is attached"
haha ik i just died a little inside when i hear that
facepalmed soo hard
Yeah seems to not know the significance of the bridge attachment point...
Could it be he is just, gasp, joking?
My guess is he's never built at guitar before.
Mostly because his lack of knowledge is so complete, and untarnished by experience
I feel like a tongue and groove connection or something similar between the parts would be a lot more stable.
Yes, dovetail or tongue and groove.
Anyways, here's wonderwall
Don't fix intonation until you get the neck set correctly or it will have to be done again Adjusting the truss rod or working on the nut are to way to fix the action but there is a 3rd adjustment that may need to be made and that is a shim in the neck pocket. If the strings are to close to the frets at the top (nearest the nut) but too far from the lower frets it may need a neck shim. Getting a professional set up may help and make the guitar play the best it can. in some areas, a set up can be 45 to 90 dollars. But RUclips has plenty of tutorials on setting up a guitar if you don't want to spend the money. But it sounds good from the end of video.
I expected 3D printed strings for some reason.
That would be the worst sound ever but would be pretty cool if you could basically unlimited strings for life
Joe _
Some strings on even cellos and a lotta classical guitars are in fact made from nylon.
Top Secret ukuleles too
I don't understand why people go through all that effort, but don't take the extra step to sand and finish their project.
Wayne Kendall I say leave it as is . It adds to the coolness of it. It’s a 3d printed guitar.
I would speculate that he wanted it unfinished to validate to the other 3D printer geeks that it was in fact 3D printed?
I was thinking the same thing. When I saw him scrapping with a exact-o....i cringed so hard....the plastic would be awesome to sand down and finish. Hell, add a clear coat if you want the color.
El Rene Orion Salmon he was scraping it with the exacto so the glue would stick on better
@KingFisher TheFirst 8:20???? I might even sand it down and paint it
"don't have an amp so ill use this bluetooth speaker" outro: check out this cool marshal/orange amp combo!
"gear down" that input gain, your guitar is clipping :p
Clipping on the way in isn't a problem, but when you're losing half of the waveform.. oof.
@@JUNKO____ Yes its a problem when its going to any kind of audio interface. You get much better signal without nasty artifacts when the input levels are set properly. Then again the computer mic in is shitty and you cant get a really good input from it anyway.
@@N4ppul4 "Better signal" is all determined by what genre you're doing.
@@JUNKO____ I think you think that clipping in this case is wanted overdrive or distortion. Im a metal guy and believe me I know what kind of distortion you want to the guitar signal and the last thing is clipping audio interface (be it the pc motherboards audio i/o or a offboard studio audio interface). The only distortion Ross wants is the emulated tweed amp.
I just realized we might be talking about different parts of the video. I was talking about when he plugged guitar straight to pc and not the last clip of plugging the guitar to amp.
@@N4ppul4 We're talking about the same thing. Clipping on the way in is a great way to tame (overdriven/distorted) guitars' peaks before distortion. Joey Sturgis has practiced this for a long time and I find I get great results, even on clean guitars. I guess it's a similar idea to clipping a kick drum for metal, makes the attack less obnoxious, balances it out and gives it more of a thwack instead of a plasticky click.
The trick with changing gloves when your hands are super sweaty is....you go up a size. If you had Medium gloves, you go to Large. If you're already at XXL, well, you're SOL. Replace your hands probably...
Now the caveat is going up a size means you're more likely to tear them since you now have extra glove to get caught on stuff :D
Haha love it. Remember, it’s all about the tone woods.
NICE video, love the look of the guitar.
All aboaaaard!
Ha ha ha ha ha haaaaaaaa...
Needs more dovetails to hold em together
Super cool!
Very cool Ross! Sent the video over to my nephew to checkout.
I had a lot of fun watching this.
Finally! Something new in my reccomended that isnt rubbish.
appreciate the crazy train at the end 🤘🏻
You are awesome and I didnt know that went on in my state!!! That's amazing!!!
You're bringing this to MRRF, yes?
Of course!
Sup from indiana
It's a nice color.
Wow that's cool
I would have designed slots into the body, so when you put it together it's not going to shift around too much. Some hidden bolt holes could also help to clamp the body together better.
would be easy enough to drill some holes for bolts... also if it was recessed in the honeycomb you could glue some flat sections so it just looked like a wood body
I was thinking that
You should have used clamps to push the pieces together while gluing, it would make the whole thing a lot stronger. Also it would have been better to shield out the cavities with something like copper tape to stop you getting 60 cycle hum. It shouldn't be too bad since you are using humbucking pickups but you would really notice the difference with single coil pickups. I think that your problem with the action is the neck break angle. You can probably fix it by placing a thin pad in the neck pocket between the most forward two neck screws.
Dont let Fender see this you might give them ideas
I would expect this rather from Gibson than fender
Given that they built one out of cardboard it would not surprise me that they have tried 3D-printing already.
I appreciate these comments 😂😂
It felt like "clamp champ" moments were missing when he was gluing the stuff together
That DSL sounded great, hard to believe it's a 3d printed body with a cheap pawn shop neck and a $40 pickguard set of electronics.
you can modify the design to have clips and stuff to snap together. can take it apart too if want too.
strong ass magnets maybe ;)
WHAT TYPE OF TONE PLASTIC DID YOU USE FOR THE BODY ?
Don't forget about the tone finish!
Dipshit tone is in the fret material
@@benfennell6842 Sorry... but no. At least not according to all the "tone wood fanboys"
There's no way that thing isn't gonna snap from all the tension. He's just gonna wake up in the middle of the night to a loud crack.
Great video as always! However the first thing before printing a big model which will interface with other components is to print just the interface to test if the holes/slots/etc are just the right size and position (at least in my opinion). It's crazy that you had to drill new holes to attach the bridge.
aweeeesome!!!
If you're not getting a buzz on the lower frets, then your string height is not too high at the nut. You should be able to adjust intonation with the bridge saddles. Looks like you've got room to get it right.
ive been thinking about doing this just waiting for my big 3d printer to be completed
Nice Ending 🤙
Best titled 3D Printed Guitar Body
Making sure you don't accidentally glue to the table by intentionally gluing to the table
So fucking awesome
Everybody's got that one friend ;)
You could in future design the prints to have holes in them to place 3mm steel pins ( bought from ebay 3mm rod) and used to mate the parts perfectly
Maybe you could add some thin laminations in the pick up cavities spanning both sides of the seam. Similar in guitar repair when someone adds “cleats“… But yours would be rather large and long. Basically thin pieces the shape of the pickup cavity glued down over the seam to cover both sides and give some support. Also maybe you could drill splines and add small metal or carbon fiber rods through the middle of the guitar to join the segments. Or possibly the channels could be printed in and bars could be pressed in afterwards. Very cool project
Yes, I waas thinking of doing thee exact same thing to my body segments to provide more stability. My question. What do I use for adhesive? Epoxy? SPecifically what kind of epoxy?
3D print a groupie.
cool!
I love your attitude about mistakes.
¡Dude! Amazing video! So, how's the guitar months later? Are you having issues with the intonation?
I like how it matches your shirt 😂
If you want to check the neck relief, capo the first fret, hold down the string at the last fret and measure the clearance between the string and 12th fret; it should be about the thickness of a business card, this removes the nut height from the equation so you know if you need to adjust the truss rod. With the capo on the first fret, check the height of the strings at the 12thr fret. With the capo removed, check the height of the strings at the 1st fret for the nut height. If you have the right nut height but the action is too high and you can't adjust the saddle height down further, you might need to shim the neck to tilt it back more. Premier Guitar has some great info on doing that stuff.
this dude is unironically wearing sunglasses indoors
Set the neck in straight to start with. Great body all the same. I need to make one! Thanks for posting...
Very cool! - but you might consider using a full length neck (through the entire length of the body). Plastic creeps slowly under tension, so I wouldn't expect the neck angle to stay put on this guitar. Still a very cool project. :-)
Bob Currie the term you are thinking of is a 'neck-through' guitar ;)
Yes, thanks Rimorox.
A Black Pick Guard would be Perfect. With a Maple Fretboard, black hardware. It would intrigue me much more. Cool video, thank you for sharing!
Nice guitar Ed
Cool
Awesome! I've designed a couple guitars I've been meaning to 3D print and build, but I haven't quite figured out what infil density I should use to avoid the string tension snapping the body, like you were also concerned about. Any ideas? Thanks!
I hate to give up the secret!!! Haha!!
The guy playing at the end is a different person!!
Guy building it has red hair, the guy playing has black. Ok. So maybe he dyed his hair? But the guy at the end has hairy arms! Oh and less chubby. Totally different skill level too.
Trickery! ;)
I grew up in Indiana, back when they only had corn and utter despair. And no alcohol on Sunday.
MRRF and Gloop! A winning combination! (Would be improved by GreenGate3D PETG filament, of course, but still nice work on the video.)
Hey, that's a really cool project! I would like to know how well the guitar holds up after all this time. I was planning to print one myself, but wasn't sure if the guitar would last long because of all the tension. I'd be glad if someone could help me out with this. Thanks!
Two words
tone wood
16:33 Kiss me - Song. One of my favourites!
Now 3d print a neck!
The problem with that is warping and sizing because you cant 3d print the whole thing so unless you design is perfected to the milimeter it probably wont work
good i like
From your designs and creations I was able to create a very low cost underwater robotic arm with a brushless motor. With the design and high ratio gearing a brushless mote which functions underwater was able to work. From all of that I was able to achieve a very low cost robotic arm for deep sea exploration and I created a thesis from that
Un Poco De Todo?
Jajajaja si. :V
Nylon for the classic Stevie Ray tone!
Sometimes you just gotta sand down the frets themselves
The dude at the end was going off
fantastico
Some double-sided tape holding a sheet of sandpaper to your work table might make the process of removing the edge bumps faster and be more accurate.
Good job following safety instructions. Always use recommended PPE. If that glue got onto your skin, the chemicals should be absorbed and go straight to your liver or kidneys. I am a retired aviation professional with 40 years in the trade. When you started with the gloves and saying about judging, you rang my bell and I had to chime in. I hope you never apologize for using PPE (personal protective equipment) again. Other people should apologize for not using it.
Cool project. I want to print musical instruments.
What's to judge? I get contact dermatitis now if I touch harsh stuff from repeated exposure to resin, wish I wore gloves. Gloves are preferable to my thumb skin peeling off over and over.
i like it
lmao is that a space bucket in the corner?
This is a great guitar to giveaway 😁
I've printed this same guitar
Watching someone widdle plastic with an exacto knife is starting something in me because when I was five my grandpa left his exacto knife out so I started widdling the plastic handle on a pencil case, slipped, and left a permanent scar on my thumb.
Does that glue have any problems with heat? If not, I would recomend baking the body to strengthen it a little bit. I'm really curious if it is handling the tension without deforming. If you can do a follow up video when you find it's relevant it would be great.
you can adjust the screws on the bridge to adjust string length.
OKAAAYYY FUCK now you know we live in 2022 when you can literally print your own guitar :D.
This is soooooo sick. And it doesn´t sounds that bad for a plastic guitar. It´s kinda thin but yeah it´s printed from plastic. I wonder if it´s 100% infill or which percentages did you use ?
i've custom designed a new 3D printed electric guitar which is printed in one piece on my CReality 10 400 X 400 X 400 3D printer. I'm installing a wireless FM modulator with echo, flanger, distortion and phaser built in. It won't have a cord connector rather it will simply transmit a FM signal to a radio which can plug into the Amp. I'm also adding an bluetooth application for control of output sounds. I've also included a record and playback option.
cool video, maybe next time bring that guitar input wayyyyy down though so you don't get audio clipping. thanks for sharing!
What printer did you use for this project? What other printers do you have?
Swap out two elements (front and back) from your other pickboard with the new one
crazy train
Get a deburring tool. You'll LOVE IT instead of using the exacto for trimming.
this iis basically a guitar hero controller xD
are you gonna 3d print the neck and fret board on the next one ?
Regular superglue works great on PLA
While you're in Indiana, stop by Sweetwater in Fort Wayne. Show your project them, they'd probably be pretty interested in it. Also see if one of their guitar technicians can take a look at it, make it work and sound the best that it can.
great idea, how much was it to make the body, love to have one for a project. would you think of making one to sell?
When is it I need to go to this convention
Just another video that blows the whole "tone wood" theory right out of the water.
Sure, if you add tons of distortion even a fork with strings would sound OK. Clean sound tho...
@@viniwittke the tonewood theory has been proven time and time again 100% false when it comes to electric guitars... 100% of the sound that an electric guitar makes comes 100% from the electronics... Period.
@@graydation Really? Can you send me a good video that shows that? Not arguing, just genuinely curious. Cheers
@@viniwittke dude... Theres literally hundreds of videos here on youtube of great sounding guitars that arent even made of wood or other traditional materials that sound great and they have done blind sound tests and people cannot tell the difference.
@@graydation although it might be really hard to tell the difference on a blind test, things such as sustain and vibration do make a difference when using dense materials such as hard wood against, say, plastic. Therefore I wouldn't consider a 100% of the sound comes from the electronics, though I'll agree they play a huge part on the sound and you can have amazing guitars with non traditional materials... Cheers
Would it be possible to incorporate slightly rounded corners into the design to eliminate or mitigate that problem?
Yes!
You should fill the gaps with wood or something lol
Just downloaded a strat myself and chopped it into six; I plan on using pegs and holes to align it rather than do it by eye… cool job tho…
I think that body could really be turned into something pretty fantastic. Of course the "tone wood" people would think its pure trash. Great project. I think the 40 dollar pickups sound like complete garbage. I would like to see a build with some duncan pickups and maybe a Warmoth neck.
I wish I could afford to spend more on these projects!
Can't tell if it sounds good or bad without a microphone myself, but you'd be surprised how good some cheap p'ups sound, it's a very simple item which can't really be messed up all too badly.
JAKE from two and a half man... Is that you ?
That guitar may need some fine tuning. But that little Marshall with the orange cab get a very nice randy tone.
A very green video my friend.
How is the guitar holding up in terms of material?
The plastic you need to trim is called "Sprue."