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I am curious, what it would cost to print in metal? Most likely could remove the jail cell from around the items, this should save some cost. These look great.
I love how one of the underlying assumptions of the Railwire is that nobody knows anything about what they're talking about (especially if they're a proven expert at it).
@Ed Kapuscinski , I'm not offended and I don't mind sharing the facts of it all. Everybody learns that way.Honestly I wish they could be cast in brass as I have them designed, but they would likely look like they were- sans-any semblance of detail. Now if GHQ could spin cast them in pewter....Sometimes I wish that I could learn that process and have the right tools to do it. I think I would really enjoy it.
John, pewter is better, but is still a very soft metal. Like I mentioned, best would be lost-wax-brass (aka investment) castings. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lost-wax_casting Those are used for casting very small and fine-detailed parts. BLMA horns were done using that method, and pretty much all of the brass model manufacturers use that method for making small brass parts for their models. Heck, even the Life-Like stem locos had their smokebox front done as a lost-wax brass casting. Miniatures by Eric also uses this technique for making their parts.I recall @robert3985 has experience in this type of casting. I believe he mentioned that jewelers could do small runs of list-wax parts fairly affordably. But if your airhorns are fully customizable, then that process will likely not be economical.Shapeways can print items in wax. That can be then used directly for the lost-wax investment casting
Well, nowhere did I mention anything other than Leslie horns so without definitive dimensional info lik I got for the Leslie horns, the Natthans are a non-starter.
Well, I would still like similar Leslies, if that is all I can get. In N scale, I doubt that normal viewers will notice more than the number of horns and the directions they are facing.But, if I can find info on the Nathans, are you interested in offering those, too?
@robert3985 , Can you share an image of something in N that you have had investment cast that is similar in delicateness to the horns above? I would like to see some macro images of features such as scaled 3/8 hex bolt head.Shapeways no longer prints in wax, and some of the details on this design are at the limits of printing in FXD already, much less brass or wax.Shapeways provides for no inventory, no shipping management or cost to me, and no packaging so any investment outside of designing something is expense for a cottage producer such as me. MAKING that parts is only part of the equation.You can see from the minimal interest here that having the ability to order one-shot custom investment cast horns for EXACTLY what a customer needs would be an expensive proposition. Leslie's total assembly complexity has 5 chimes, 5 manifolds, three power chambers and two orientation factors at each chime position on the manifold for the chimes and power chambers.Single = 1 manifold x 5 chimes x 3 power chambers = 15 potential assemblies (horn is symmetrical so Forward and Rearward are ignoredDual = 1 manifold x 5 chimes x 3 power chambers x 2 positions x 1 orientation = 30 potential assembliesTriple = 3 manifolds 5 chimes x 3 power chambers x 3 positions x 3 orientations per location = 405 potential assemblies15 + 30 + 405= 450 potential unique designs that I could never afford to tool up even at $20 per investment + materials.Printing them at Shapeways affords anyone to have that one horn that they have always wanted. Ed's Frankenhorn is that example.Is $12.50 USD + shiping really ALOT for this? No one needs 100 horns, especially if they cannot be sold, packaged and shipped cost free to me. This is an S Scale tree printed at Shapeways for a client. This tree could not be printed in Brass if scaled to N.