@@8bitarmory846 y'all tryna make me look dumb. "USS is an abbreviation for "United States Ship" and is used to identify commissioned ships in the United States Navy. The prefix is only used while the ship is in commission, and before that it may be called a "pre-commissioning unit" or referred to by name without a prefix. The abbreviation USS can also refer to any commissioned military vessel of the United States, including ships from the Coast Guard, Army, Air Force, and Space Force." -ai
The approach to stability is kinda surprising. The highest initial stability is generally found in flat bottomed barge like boat. While adding a volumetric keel to the bottom of the boat lets you get your ballast lower and bring down the center of gravity it also moves the center of buoyancy down. When the boat heels over that center of buoyancy moves to the side that's high and works against you. He is a boat builder rather than a naval architect (which is properly considered a branch of engineering) but Leo Goulden of Sampson Boatworks has a really good video explaining boat stability.
Interesting, but the original Benchy's shape might not work as a flat-bottomed boat. I'm not an expert, but it looks more like a (very) curved hull which has just had a bit of the bottom sliced off, possibly at less than the best angle.
Emily, I think you did a decent job with this test model. I suggest you try a bigger one wide enough to comfortably fit 3 people, with a 2-person limit. Then, add weight in the center and no pontoons. Also, add a ring to the build in the front center for towing in case of emergency, as well as a patel or 2. Required lighting and eventually getting it licensed (for legal reasons, don't want a ticket for an unlicensed watercraft).
If Macroplastic was 2 times bigger, it could hold 2 batteries and Dan could travel 2 times the distance and Emily could get 2 times the Wendy's. I think we're going to need a bigger Macroplastic.
Actually Emily really need to do more bigger. Cuz she said the life size but she still even not fit in the rooft. Okay petition to Emily do it again but more bigger, start!
The stock Benchy isn't seaworthy??? my trust in this entire industry is shattered. I'm looking forward to seeing you print different (better?) propellers for the Macro-Plastic. Dan: good job naming things.
probably depends on the infill. If you do variable infill you can probably make it bottom heavy enough for it to float. Flat bottom might also be an issue however, which is why you add a raft.
On top of that, a small solar panel on top of the cabin of The Macroplastic probably wouldn't have added too much weight and, during the peak of the day, probably would have slowed the drain on the battery by a decent bit. It's all about redundancy!
"What is this? A BENCHY FOR ANT'S!? It needs to be... 3 times bigger than this! How is Emily suppose to have a lake adventure if she can't even fit inside the benchy? "
@@Der-Martinski And we now have the idea for another video. "Yeah, remember our boat from earlier? We sawed it in half and put it back together with flex tape. We're still not sponsored."
This is what I was looking for! They don't have to heat seal all the pieces together, just throw some clear packing tape over the seams and hammer it with some Flex Seal! I waited but the MythBusters never made a spray-in bed liner boat like they did with duct tape.
What's funny is I'm actually a part of the Tuggy community and someone has released the STL files to be able to 3D print a full sized Tuggy this exact same way. Maybe that'll be next on the list. Here's hoping!
There's a bunch of small boat-builders that use bed sheets, diluted epoxy and coats of exterior house paint instead of fiberglass. It's very cheap and sometimes works better than fiberglass, depending on what you're sealing. When the boat is already largely waterproof, it's a decent option for smoothing the hull and adding just a bit of extra assurance it won't leak.
She’s smart, funny, creative and this is one sic build! I’m really impressed! Not only am I going to subscribe and figure out how to support this channel, I’m going to buy my first 3D printer today!
If you were my daughter, I would be so proud of you. I am a mechanical engineer and you embody the essence of being an engineer. Being creative, pushing the limits and having fun at the same time. The world needs more people like you. Keep up the god work.
To balance it, you need to get the center of mass (with a rider) as low as possible, relative to the water line. It is even advantages to put extra weight in the bottom, so the waterline rises. You could have filled the keal with sand or something, right when printing maybe. You will always displace exactly as much water as you weigh, not more, not less. (assuming you're not sinking)
Paw-paw always taught me that if you chuck your batteries at exactly a 27 degree angle directly into the center of your neighbors pond, they will safely discharge into the ground.
Idk why I haven't seen your channel recommended before, because I absolutely love this type of stuff and am subbed to other channels like yours, but I am so glad you showed up in my alg today! You are both hilarious, especially in the deadpan delivery and the "off-camera" quick convos. I subscribed to you and turned on notifs cuz I'm that entertained, and I'm only 5 minutes in on this video, which is the first of yours I've seen. Thanks for making this kind of content! I'm stoked to check out your older vids!
It's the VW Harlequin Golf of benchys! DAS BOAT!! Also, deep cycle batteries are preferred for trolling motors. I had a plastic, one person boat and putted around a huge lake for three days. Probably 12 hours of motor time.
@@paulmichaelfreedman8334 that's simply not correct. It depends a lot on the kind of battery. Lithium batteries, yes, they get damaged when depleted. Lead batteries, not that much, specially if they are kept correctly: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lead-acid_battery
@@almarma I know that, but most people think lithium when thinking of batteries nowadays. Lead-acid is an old tech now only used in established systems that have not been upgraded yet. And I think it should only be used now in situations where the specific properties of lead-acid make it uniquely suitable. Anyways, the "zero-point" energy (chemically speaking) is huge in lithium batteries. About lead-acid, I know they can be deep-discharged way further than lithium, but with standard batteries you do have to watch out for dendrite formation. Absorbed glass mat batteries have way less dendrite formation and can be ultra-deep discharged with little to no damage. AGM batteries are sturdy as hell too, can smash a hole in them without the electrolyte spilling out, or very little. I dabbled a bit with batteries around 15 years ago, interesting business.
A major problem I see is that 3D prints are porous so over time this thing would fill with water due to absorption unless you give it some sort of clear coat or something.
yeah, i think the reason they didnt do a coating is specifically because the youtube comments would say "oh the coating is doing all the work its not really 3D printed at this point", but i mean, cant win with the youtube comments anyways. and the extra floatation tubes are way worse than a clear coat. also at this scale, im pretty sure the plastic isnt pourous enough to absorb water all the way through. the wall thickness has to be prettyyyy thick, as opposed to the usual thickness where the porosity allows for routes into the hollow parts. they only needed it to work for one video though, so it worked out either way.
I ve printed a lot of watertight things from pla and petg , it's only a matter of settings .. easiest way is bigger nozzle like 0.8 ,0.3-0.4 lh ,few degrees upper than normal temp few % more extr vol , lower speed and cooling ...
@@arcanealchemist3190 I really don't like these comments because the coating would only solve a minor issue. It's not like water instantly penetrates the plastic, it takes pressure and time. Sometimes people want to be annoying without thinking about how it really happens. But yeah 3D prints have these pores. The 3D printed submarine video proved this. Because submarines withstand pressure... Water gets in a lot faster. For submarines this is a major issue. But I'm going to argue that even carbon fiber isn't good enough for submarines... It has to be a very special steel alloy.
This was hilarious! The 55lbs thrust motor was definitely overkill for something that size, but hey, why not go big? I love the manic energy on this video, and congrats on a really cool build!
Most every state requires boat registration the moment a motor is put on it. Im glad you disobeyed such an unjust law inadvertently exposing how ridiculous it is.
For plastic lass just use polycement plastic glue, it works by melting the two surfaces together so you don't need epoxy and it'd be stronger and more waterproof.
Congratulations on your first long video reaching a million views! I'm saying it now at 700k+ because it's totally going to go past 1M. Love your content. Cheers J
It makes me so happy to see people from our state doing so much cool stuff with 3d printing. You and Dan are going places in the engineering world and I'm excited to see it.
Such a fun idea. Would love to try this myself. Such a cool ride. Really glad you worked with saveitforparts as well. Glad he is getting more traction.
Pretty hilarious watching you guys trial and error the basic boat knowledge that we take for granted as people who know some basic stuff about boats, having seen and been in many boats
So awesome :) You can add foam (for boyancy) and also use a sealer, which is what lots of boats have now so even if they manage to get a hole in the sealer they will float.
I was watching the SpongeBob Aka Bean video "Again", And I went to go watch another, And then I see that you uploaded like.. 20 minutes ago? LITERALLY MADE MY DAY
gotta love that she's so engineer minded she NEEDED it to look like the Benchy Boat, even though 99% of the mainstream audience watching would not care whatsoever about it having that specific look.
The Macro-plastic killed me! Great video
same I scared my cat
My first thought was the Benchus.
condoleances 🙏
bot comment
I came to comment this. Macro-plastic is gold for sure!
This is exactly what RUclips was made for all these years ago and I'm glad content like this (still) exists.
basically wasted a bunch of talent and resources on creating a giant childs toy for entertainment.
meh.
@@chrishayes5755it’s a 3D printed boat how much entertainment do you want?
Bruh, how old are you? lmao
@@chrishayes5755 and you wasted your talent and time resources on creating a pointless comment. Were you entertained?
can't wait for the first 3D printed aircraft carrier "USS gridfinity"
uss is for aircraft? I thought it was for boats
@tray84 lmaoo Aircraft *Carrier*
🎶 *Danger Zone intensifies* 🎶
@@tray84 keyword: carrier
@@8bitarmory846 y'all tryna make me look dumb. "USS is an abbreviation for "United States Ship" and is used to identify commissioned ships in the United States Navy. The prefix is only used while the ship is in commission, and before that it may be called a "pre-commissioning unit" or referred to by name without a prefix.
The abbreviation USS can also refer to any commissioned military vessel of the United States, including ships from the Coast Guard, Army, Air Force, and Space Force." -ai
The approach to stability is kinda surprising. The highest initial stability is generally found in flat bottomed barge like boat. While adding a volumetric keel to the bottom of the boat lets you get your ballast lower and bring down the center of gravity it also moves the center of buoyancy down. When the boat heels over that center of buoyancy moves to the side that's high and works against you.
He is a boat builder rather than a naval architect (which is properly considered a branch of engineering) but Leo Goulden of Sampson Boatworks has a really good video explaining boat stability.
Can you tell me the name of the video you're talking about?
@@yzirf_sharova 'Stability Calculations (Boatbuilding / Tally Ho EP125)' on the channel 'Sampson Boat Co'
Interesting, but the original Benchy's shape might not work as a flat-bottomed boat. I'm not an expert, but it looks more like a (very) curved hull which has just had a bit of the bottom sliced off, possibly at less than the best angle.
Emily, I think you did a decent job with this test model.
I suggest you try a bigger one wide enough to comfortably fit 3 people, with a 2-person limit. Then, add weight in the center and no pontoons.
Also, add a ring to the build in the front center for towing in case of emergency, as well as a patel or 2. Required lighting and eventually getting it licensed (for legal reasons, don't want a ticket for an unlicensed watercraft).
If Macroplastic was 2 times bigger, it could hold 2 batteries and Dan could travel 2 times the distance and Emily could get 2 times the Wendy's. I think we're going to need a bigger Macroplastic.
Call it the Megaplastic
Actually Emily really need to do more bigger. Cuz she said the life size but she still even not fit in the rooft. Okay petition to Emily do it again but more bigger, start!
Make it 4 times bigger. They can go get the 4 for 4 in the 4
@@KAK_PAN Also need to license Jan Hammer's Miami Vice theme.
@@lightning1896 Ah yes, the GIGAPLASTIC
The stock Benchy isn't seaworthy??? my trust in this entire industry is shattered.
I'm looking forward to seeing you print different (better?) propellers for the Macro-Plastic.
Dan: good job naming things.
probably depends on the infill. If you do variable infill you can probably make it bottom heavy enough for it to float. Flat bottom might also be an issue however, which is why you add a raft.
No, it is not. It's too top heavy. A while back someone redesigned the benchy to float a lot better, I'm surprised they didn't use that model instead.
This is the boat version of: "You wouldn't download a car!"
I like it!
this generation doesn't know the reference... they just know how to say "bro" and use the word "literally" abundantly and incorrectly
@@DS-mo6md If you think "literally" use is bad, wait until you see "basically" use
5:45 looks like "improvised combat benchy" with two torpedo tubes.
Naval Warship Benchy collab with PSR when?
Soon in World of Warships...
6:01 damn near maniacal laughter lmao, I love it
missed opportunity to say "boat load of plastic" 0/23 Banjo-Kazooie puzzle pieces.
what no jiggies
@@NonsensicalSpudz absolutely NONE fr
I felt like replying but I didn't know what to reply with
Missed opportunity to name it Benchy McBenchface!
DuhHUT!
Always take a backup paddle. This is my favorite project of yours so far. Excellent job!
and a backup battery too
they could 3d print a backup paddle, so obviously, bring a 3d printer
@@Ticktok_of_Oz Now we're cooking with fire!
On top of that, a small solar panel on top of the cabin of The Macroplastic probably wouldn't have added too much weight and, during the peak of the day, probably would have slowed the drain on the battery by a decent bit. It's all about redundancy!
Or sticks and a big sheet for an ad hoc sail
"What is this? A BENCHY FOR ANT'S!? It needs to be... 3 times bigger than this! How is Emily suppose to have a lake adventure if she can't even fit inside the benchy? "
He's absolutely right.
True.. she has to sit INSIDE the cabin....
And also printed out of Petg so that you don’t need to keep it inside, oh and use a DJI power bank or somthin
Make the steering wheel functional
Exactly 😅
2:38 "belive in yourself!" 😂
6:18 + Fast + Furious: Water Challenge
10:45: memorable moment of the survivor's last words
0:14 Oh hey, I saw that video too! 😄
You’re supposed to throw all your old batteries in the ocean, how else do you charge the electric eels?
Hmmm?
Fr bro #savetheeels #dropyourbatterys
electric eels live in rivers for starters
@@thehiddencryptid you haven’t heard of the oceanic electric eels! See this is why we must dump our batteries in the ocean! There are so few left!
Styropyro ahh comment
Flex seal...ya know..the dude who slapped taped on a leaking pipe...flex seal..clear paint...done and done
you mean the guy that sawed the boat in half and then drove it :D
@@Der-Martinski And we now have the idea for another video.
"Yeah, remember our boat from earlier? We sawed it in half and put it back together with flex tape. We're still not sponsored."
This is what I was looking for! They don't have to heat seal all the pieces together, just throw some clear packing tape over the seams and hammer it with some Flex Seal! I waited but the MythBusters never made a spray-in bed liner boat like they did with duct tape.
What's funny is I'm actually a part of the Tuggy community and someone has released the STL files to be able to 3D print a full sized Tuggy this exact same way.
Maybe that'll be next on the list. Here's hoping!
hello @hewfil1 do you mind sharing the community's link? thnx
Umm, yeah gotta give the deets on the Tuggy community! I've been thinking about building one recently!
I could use a tuggy
Link please 🙏
@@TheFutureLooksGrimm They keep deleting my responses lmao
I have been printing for about 7 years now and COOL is an understatement! I absolutely love it. Great work!
Not me looking at a printer with a 1 meter build volume in the corner of my shop and nothing but problematically deep lakes nearby
4:55 how else are we going to charge the eels
Why is this so funny lmao
Dr. Nefario!
@@Dailey100 We gotta charge the eels gru!
Spotto
Fr
There's a bunch of small boat-builders that use bed sheets, diluted epoxy and coats of exterior house paint instead of fiberglass. It's very cheap and sometimes works better than fiberglass, depending on what you're sealing. When the boat is already largely waterproof, it's a decent option for smoothing the hull and adding just a bit of extra assurance it won't leak.
Where could I find their forums?
10:36 The fact that you corrected the part where he was lost but not the part where you and John abandoned him 💀💀💀
Or the fact that it was day 6
I couldnt believe this. 3 kayakers left one guy in a printed boat without a phone or paddle on his own, at sunset.
I have never wanted to own multiple 3D printers more then now
She’s smart, funny, creative and this is one sic build! I’m really impressed! Not only am I going to subscribe and figure out how to support this channel, I’m going to buy my first 3D printer today!
If you were my daughter, I would be so proud of you. I am a mechanical engineer and you embody the essence of being an engineer. Being creative, pushing the limits and having fun at the same time. The world needs more people like you. Keep up the god work.
“We printed a small one and filled it with rocks”
The shenanigans were most excellent.
4:25 THE MACROPLASTIC
💀dead 💀
🍨
8:43 Pirates of Caribbean ❤😂😂
using the top of a resin printer as a fancy waterbucket is wild - im impressed.
3:30
Founder of gloop: smart math solution
Emily: OOGA BOOGA
I love that it gives me the option to 'translate to english'.
@@rayrowley4013 Translation: OOGA BOOGA means OOGA BOOGA
(like no joke the translation did literally nothing)
@@Kalvinjj I know, thats part of what makes it so funny. LOL!
@@Kalvinjj Translation: Ze Goggles Do Nothing!
To balance it, you need to get the center of mass (with a rider) as low as possible, relative to the water line. It is even advantages to put extra weight in the bottom, so the waterline rises. You could have filled the keal with sand or something, right when printing maybe.
You will always displace exactly as much water as you weigh, not more, not less. (assuming you're not sinking)
Paw-paw always taught me that if you chuck your batteries at exactly a 27 degree angle directly into the center of your neighbors pond, they will safely discharge into the ground.
I heard that if you discard the batteries in the neighbors yard the battery fairy comes and gets them
Should've made it solar-powered.
Other than that, this looks like such a cool project. Your videos are so fun to watch!
3D printing a kayak or at least the farsteners for coroplastic sheets would be a noble cause.
"That's got to be the best pirate I've ever seen."
"So it would seem..."
8:43
Just seeing this gave me the same whimsy and awe that seeing the pop boat in ponyo did. I'm so frickin jelly you have your own tiny boat
Thumbnail has Myth Busters duct tape boat episode vibes lol, love to see it.
if MythBusters ever goes for another shot at a reboot, they should really get Emily and Dan
This is the 21st C version of that myth
@@antonventura6364 Give him a beret to wear and its a wrap lmao
Idk why I haven't seen your channel recommended before, because I absolutely love this type of stuff and am subbed to other channels like yours, but I am so glad you showed up in my alg today! You are both hilarious, especially in the deadpan delivery and the "off-camera" quick convos. I subscribed to you and turned on notifs cuz I'm that entertained, and I'm only 5 minutes in on this video, which is the first of yours I've seen. Thanks for making this kind of content! I'm stoked to check out your older vids!
Now when you hit a million subscribers make an EVEN bigger benchy that can hold 3 people, Paint it to prevent the SUN, and get a wendys 4 for 4
It's the VW Harlequin Golf of benchys! DAS BOAT!!
Also, deep cycle batteries are preferred for trolling motors. I had a plastic, one person boat and putted around a huge lake for three days. Probably 12 hours of motor time.
The amount of energy that's in an empty battery (below 30% is considered empty) is still enough to destroy itself.
@@paulmichaelfreedman8334 that's simply not correct. It depends a lot on the kind of battery. Lithium batteries, yes, they get damaged when depleted. Lead batteries, not that much, specially if they are kept correctly: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lead-acid_battery
@@almarma I know that, but most people think lithium when thinking of batteries nowadays. Lead-acid is an old tech now only used in established systems that have not been upgraded yet. And I think it should only be used now in situations where the specific properties of lead-acid make it uniquely suitable. Anyways, the "zero-point" energy (chemically speaking) is huge in lithium batteries.
About lead-acid, I know they can be deep-discharged way further than lithium, but with standard batteries you do have to watch out for dendrite formation. Absorbed glass mat batteries have way less dendrite formation and can be ultra-deep discharged with little to no damage. AGM batteries are sturdy as hell too, can smash a hole in them without the electrolyte spilling out, or very little. I dabbled a bit with batteries around 15 years ago, interesting business.
A major problem I see is that 3D prints are porous so over time this thing would fill with water due to absorption unless you give it some sort of clear coat or something.
yeah, i think the reason they didnt do a coating is specifically because the youtube comments would say "oh the coating is doing all the work its not really 3D printed at this point", but i mean, cant win with the youtube comments anyways. and the extra floatation tubes are way worse than a clear coat. also at this scale, im pretty sure the plastic isnt pourous enough to absorb water all the way through. the wall thickness has to be prettyyyy thick, as opposed to the usual thickness where the porosity allows for routes into the hollow parts.
they only needed it to work for one video though, so it worked out either way.
No, some aren't. You have no idea what you're talking about! Hint: there's more than one type of plastic, with different degrees of porosity!
I ve printed a lot of watertight things from pla and petg , it's only a matter of settings .. easiest way is bigger nozzle like 0.8 ,0.3-0.4 lh ,few degrees upper than normal temp few % more extr vol , lower speed and cooling ...
@@arcanealchemist3190 I really don't like these comments because the coating would only solve a minor issue. It's not like water instantly penetrates the plastic, it takes pressure and time. Sometimes people want to be annoying without thinking about how it really happens. But yeah 3D prints have these pores. The 3D printed submarine video proved this. Because submarines withstand pressure... Water gets in a lot faster. For submarines this is a major issue. But I'm going to argue that even carbon fiber isn't good enough for submarines... It has to be a very special steel alloy.
You're doing it wrong if your prints are porous.
This was hilarious! The 55lbs thrust motor was definitely overkill for something that size, but hey, why not go big? I love the manic energy on this video, and congrats on a really cool build!
As much as I love these videos, that “schizo arc” joke was very ableist.
Most every state requires boat registration the moment a motor is put on it. Im glad you disobeyed such an unjust law inadvertently exposing how ridiculous it is.
Awesome project, but hear me out - rocket engines in the pontoons! Also, yay Canada!
Or warp drives
For plastic lass just use polycement plastic glue, it works by melting the two surfaces together so you don't need epoxy and it'd be stronger and more waterproof.
4:18 Cameraguy says his first two words and immediately has me in stitches! 🤣🤣🤣
I appreciate the pacing of the video. Most of the time I have to set videos to 1.25X or 1.5X, but not with this one. Thanks! Great project!
Congratulations on your first long video reaching a million views! I'm saying it now at 700k+ because it's totally going to go past 1M. Love your content. Cheers J
Emily continues to impress but also terrify me with these ideas
1:00 Is she using a top of the resin printer as a bucket?
I love that someone noticed….. yes
@@EmilyTheEngineer 😂😂😆
@EmilyTheEngineer bruh 💀.
Did you atleast clean it after using it like… that?
0:10 what about the people who printed a torture toaster first. huh?
yeah i DEFINETLY didn't do that
Good question
lol
I have never printed a benchy in 7 years of 3D printing. Fight the benchy hegemony! Benchemony? Whatever! ✊
@@radish6691lol
The turtles worst nightmare
the opening to this video single handedly made me subscribe
How is this channel not bigger? This is exactly the content I need more of
Putting the pontoons on the hull like Star Trek nacelles is a nice touch
Super nice touch!!! Hell yeah
I was afraid I was the only Star Trek nerd who noticed that. Thank you.
0:31 is gold.
That line could be used with 90% of people.
It makes me so happy to see people from our state doing so much cool stuff with 3d printing. You and Dan are going places in the engineering world and I'm excited to see it.
Such a fun idea. Would love to try this myself. Such a cool ride. Really glad you worked with saveitforparts as well. Glad he is getting more traction.
4:03 this phrase being expired makes me feel old
Swag and/or Yeet my fellow young person
Collect your complimentary joint pain at the door
The Macroplastic was an incredibly big brain name scheme 😂 Great video!
I always love Emily's pure scream of glee when something goes right
You maniacal laughter was very “mad scientist”. Well done 😂😂😂
"He was not lost we could see him the entire time" made me laugh so hard I spit water all over my keyboard. Amazing video!
When this bad boi shows up in the great pacific garbage patch in 30 years man it's gonna be a head scratcher XD Great video!
Sandbox boat? That's gotta be SaveItForParts 😂
As soon as the video started I thought “I’ve tried to float a benchy, I didn’t work” lol.
Glad you figured it out.
Yay buoyancy!!!
Awesome! Maybe next time we can try a resin-printed benchy.
Who sails on a Benchy, way out on the sea?
An engineer! Bold Emily!
Who somehow didn't drown on the way to Wendy's?
An engineer! Bold Emily!!
Ok my favorite part was you jamming on the water then the boat tipping 😂. That boast the best
4:33 one of the funniest jokes I have heard all day
*I literally choked on my water it's so good holy hells*
Pretty hilarious watching you guys trial and error the basic boat knowledge that we take for granted as people who know some basic stuff about boats, having seen and been in many boats
Tom Scott newsletter crew says hi 😆
Her energy is so chaotic.
I love it
Wow, that looks boatiful. What a work of art. Van Gogh would be proud.
1:59 you can fit so many Emily in here
The coolest shit I’ve ever seen with a 3d printer
So awesome :)
You can add foam (for boyancy) and also use a sealer, which is what lots of boats have now so even if they manage to get a hole in the sealer they will float.
6:15 Best part
This is the most amazing boat I’ve ever seen
I was watching the SpongeBob Aka Bean video "Again", And I went to go watch another, And then I see that you uploaded like.. 20 minutes ago? LITERALLY MADE MY DAY
Love the videos! I’m asking my parents for a 3D printer/ 3D printer pen for my birthday all because of you!
It is so cool !!! You could print blocks and build a house. Nice boat.
7:59 The one piece is real!!
Thousand Sunny when?!
5:54 those pontoons look like torpedo tubes
Don’t give any ideas
@@sian1_1 why not
Absolutely BRILLIANT.
8:26 there was a dog on that jet ski got me and my brother dying lol
oh hey look, its me!
Huh
I love you
@@BuildDanielBuild dawww
@@wandwuff help I'm stuck in a time loop
Fucking finally something ACTUALLY INTERESTING done with 3D printing.
gotta love that she's so engineer minded she NEEDED it to look like the Benchy Boat, even though 99% of the mainstream audience watching would not care whatsoever about it having that specific look.
I appreciate the use of the term "cash money" like its still 2015. This is the kinda chaotic energy we need more of
Goop should have sponsored this video because it’s a great example at how well it bonds parts together.
Boating friend.
what in the underated channel is going on here
It really reminds me of Elmer the Patchwork Elephant which was one of my favourite stories when I was little, it looks amazing! :D
Came for the concept, stayed for the manic deranged mad scientist laughter
My 5yo daughter loved every single second of this adventure - thank you for sharing!
Do a 3D printed kayak next!