Build A Hardware Store Race Car. Or Just Watch Me Do It. Whatever.

Автокөліктер мен көлік құралдары

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Пікірлер: 689

  • @SuperfastMatt
    @SuperfastMatt17 күн бұрын

    Go to ground.news/superfastmatt to compare news coverage and spot media bias. Subscribe through my link for 40% off unlimited access this month.

  • @SpaceMulva

    @SpaceMulva

    16 күн бұрын

    Does ground news feature stories from any sources that are anti-israel?

  • @TheStuartstardust

    @TheStuartstardust

    16 күн бұрын

    0:53 i feel like we missed out on a truss bridge jokes here, given recent events..

  • @charlieg4113

    @charlieg4113

    16 күн бұрын

    Love this choice of sponsor! I already pay them, but maybe I should sign up and pay for another account just for you... 🤔

  • @michaelblacktree

    @michaelblacktree

    16 күн бұрын

    Sanding latex paint is gonna be fun. (sarcasm) But I've had good results with polyurethane, and also with epoxy resin. When it dries, it's harder than the foam. So you have to be careful not to sand through it. Edit: Also make sure to knock down any high spots in the foam BEFORE applying the surface coating. Low spots aren't such a big deal, because you can fill them later.

  • @nobodynoone2500

    @nobodynoone2500

    16 күн бұрын

    CNBC as centrist... LMAO. Dude at least do basic diligence on the companies you promote.

  • @SidewaysGts
    @SidewaysGts16 күн бұрын

    I expected: "There is the difficult cheap way, and an easy expensive way. And my way, which is both difficult and expensive"

  • @darekmistrz4364

    @darekmistrz4364

    16 күн бұрын

    We all know that any cheap way is an expressway to finding out why expensive way is the right way.

  • @theleva7

    @theleva7

    16 күн бұрын

    Everyone who tried to DIY anything ever knows that the road to easy and cheap way is paved with multiple should've-been-easy-and-cheap-way remnants

  • @somedude2492

    @somedude2492

    16 күн бұрын

    It will be. Give it a month.

  • @AHSEN.

    @AHSEN.

    16 күн бұрын

    ​@@theleva7 Yes. :(

  • @troycongdon

    @troycongdon

    16 күн бұрын

    The easy/cheap way gets the job done. Learning how to do it the right way is expensive because education is not free. When he is done he will be able to do it cheap for the next project. It is like buying tools. It may be cheaper to pay someone else for this job but it is better in the long run to buy the tools and do it yourself.

  • @WeAreChecking
    @WeAreChecking16 күн бұрын

    Hey Matt, hopefully this doesn't get too lost in the sea of comments, but back when I was working on the aero department of my FSAE team we had excellent results using foam molds with spray-on gelcoat on top. Makes for a really nice surface finish and (potentially critically) a really durable mold so should the unfortunate happen and you crack a fiberglass part you don't have a damaged mold from the first part and can just lay up another part. Plus it's really easy to get a nice full coverage of the foam so it sands nice and even. A real tip is to use different colors for each coat so when you're sanding you have a visual indicator of when you're getting too close to the foam underneath. Lastly, it might be worth looking into some basic metrology, once you're done with the first part, it may be a good idea to 3D scan it and compare it with what you were intending to make. Mold making is a real pain and it's easy for tolerance stacking to cause some real aero headaches that feel impossible to diagnose - ask me how I know. Anyhow, really dig the content. Godspeed on the build, and I'd be more than happy to give any other advice on composites/aero if you're coming up against a particularly annoying hurdle.

  • @BloomingtonFPV

    @BloomingtonFPV

    16 күн бұрын

    This is good advice. Also consider duratec grey surface primer

  • @anonathan

    @anonathan

    16 күн бұрын

    Nice name, I understood that reference

  • @SuperfastMatt

    @SuperfastMatt

    16 күн бұрын

    Thanks for the info. There are a couple of parts that I will need to pull an actual mold off of, so I might try the gel coat spray with those.

  • @Andrew_Fernie

    @Andrew_Fernie

    16 күн бұрын

    @@anonathan Box, box. Stay out! Stay out!

  • @danielwoodard680

    @danielwoodard680

    16 күн бұрын

    Dear algorithm, please give this random-contributor-guy a bump in case he ever returns

  • @taylorgriffin7468
    @taylorgriffin746816 күн бұрын

    "...the front needs to be done well. So I am starting at the back..." SuperfastMatt is my spirit animal.

  • @joelaw728

    @joelaw728

    15 күн бұрын

    Try on an inconspicuous area first

  • @Wheagg

    @Wheagg

    13 күн бұрын

    Well, it's actually fairly smart if you think about it. Fucking up the back end isn't as big of a deal, by the time he makes it to the front he should be rather good at this. It's 100% procrastination, though

  • @mr_voron
    @mr_voron16 күн бұрын

    Man, I’m glad you added Barby vomit extraction before that top radiator got fully clogged and your spindle explosively divorced your CNC

  • @NickCohn

    @NickCohn

    16 күн бұрын

    Thanks, Matt, for making mistakes so that we don't have to 😉

  • @oraziovescovi1922

    @oraziovescovi1922

    16 күн бұрын

    I haven't watched the video yet, but judging by this comment, it'll be a wild ride

  • @timplett1

    @timplett1

    16 күн бұрын

    @@oraziovescovi1922 is there any SuperfastMatt video that ISN'T a wild ride?

  • @brianhaygood183
    @brianhaygood18316 күн бұрын

    At 1:15, I like how the "engine explodes" and "250mph" statement encompasses both the optimism and pessimism of racing.

  • @dustinbaird1008

    @dustinbaird1008

    15 күн бұрын

    I actually laughed out loud at that statement.

  • @name-less817
    @name-less81716 күн бұрын

    No ham sandwiches were harmed in the making of this video

  • @JordanKeller

    @JordanKeller

    16 күн бұрын

    Based factorio enjoyer

  • @swat1229

    @swat1229

    13 күн бұрын

    Disappointed

  • @dmacpher
    @dmacpher16 күн бұрын

    The fast cheap good triangle strikes again!

  • @scottcates

    @scottcates

    16 күн бұрын

    I'm in awe of his troubleshooting the problem(s) though. Here is my CAD face🐵

  • @petergamache5368

    @petergamache5368

    16 күн бұрын

    It's only through practical experience that one learns the "pick two" part of that mantra doesn't mean you'll actually get those two ... or even one.

  • @MrRedstoner

    @MrRedstoner

    13 күн бұрын

    @@petergamache5368 Yeah it's best stated along the line of "at most 2" rather than promising 2

  • @jamesharwell9171
    @jamesharwell917116 күн бұрын

    I used to work for a small aerospace engineering company and we built stuff the exact same way. Some of it even made it into space.... on purpose.

  • @DJDiarrhea
    @DJDiarrhea16 күн бұрын

    I recently rewatched some old videos of ThisOldTony. Notably his 3D Printing video, where he built a 3d printer on a surface plate, leveling it out with shim stock to get all the rails square and parallel. Quite the contrast to Matt who runs his CNC router off a piece of wood, fastened to the wall and supported by a single post. Love it!

  • @cosmic_cupcake

    @cosmic_cupcake

    16 күн бұрын

    funnily enough I just started poking my head into custom 3D-printer building, and when I saw Matt disassemble and the reassemble his router I immediately thought "hold on, he´s not squaring anything!" But halfassery is basically the unofficial name for this channel so I can´t say that I am surprised lol.

  • @sannyassi73

    @sannyassi73

    16 күн бұрын

    If you think this is janky you should see my laser engraver/cutter setup! It's pretty hacksy but it works very well. With enough Cardboard, duck tape and hot glue you can make most anything!

  • @SlinkyD

    @SlinkyD

    16 күн бұрын

    3 points make a plane. Unless they changed school again, then IDK. Imma Toys'R Us guy.

  • @paulnielsen8528
    @paulnielsen852816 күн бұрын

    Many years ago I ran the department, no, I was the department making expanded polyurethane caskets. No respiratory protection. Washed my hands with Methyline chloride to remove the sticky crap at the end of the day. I'm 68 and amazed I'm alive and don't have cancer or emphysema. And thrilled to see the nifty stuff a cool mind like yours makes with modern technology. And humour. Thank you for what you give to society man.

  • @danielwgk
    @danielwgk16 күн бұрын

    hey Matt, the eats-away-foam or doesnt-eat-away-foam comes from the solvents in the paint/coating. the trick we use is to spray from further away so the solvent flashes off by the time the paint gets to the foam. also, light coats so it flashes off on the surface, not soaks into the material. hope you read this and i hope it helps.

  • @kingnull2697

    @kingnull2697

    16 күн бұрын

    Damn, thats' a good hack if it works

  • @TerranCmdr

    @TerranCmdr

    16 күн бұрын

    @@kingnull2697 Can confirm we used this technique on large foam props. For most of them though we applied a 'hard coat' barrier before spraying.

  • @cafn8ed74
    @cafn8ed7416 күн бұрын

    If you are a broke Industrial Design student, you can form pink foam with surform tools. It's less dusty than sanding. Static will still turn you into a pink snow monster.

  • @D3nn1s

    @D3nn1s

    16 күн бұрын

    As a broke industrial design student i approve of this message.

  • @cafn8ed74

    @cafn8ed74

    16 күн бұрын

    @@D3nn1s been there.

  • @allareasindex7984

    @allareasindex7984

    16 күн бұрын

    Pink snow control musing: High voltage /low current plate to attract snow. Just a hasty, incomplete thought. You know, like engineering design.

  • @D3nn1s

    @D3nn1s

    16 күн бұрын

    @@cafn8ed74 youre doing ID full time now?

  • @cafn8ed74

    @cafn8ed74

    15 күн бұрын

    @@D3nn1s nah, engineering for the last twentysomething years. The skills translated well enough and from there I learned what I needed as I went along.

  • @TheThunderwars
    @TheThunderwars16 күн бұрын

    11:33 "Respectfully, may I ask if you are on the spectrum" I spit out my coffee.

  • @christianpowell1481
    @christianpowell148116 күн бұрын

    11:34 - "Respectfully, may I ask if you're on the spectrum?" lmao

  • @troycongdon

    @troycongdon

    16 күн бұрын

    Anyone watching this channel is on the spectrum…

  • @jaggederest

    @jaggederest

    16 күн бұрын

    @@troycongdon Yeah I feel like it's one of those questions where, if you have to ask...

  • @ciano5475

    @ciano5475

    16 күн бұрын

    @@troycongdon I am ✋🙂

  • @thedude4795

    @thedude4795

    15 күн бұрын

    @@troycongdon the gender spectrum lol

  • @darksu6947

    @darksu6947

    14 күн бұрын

    ​@@thedude4795Do you suffer from having the big gheys?

  • @bw1532
    @bw153216 күн бұрын

    Matt, you are an inspiration. Not because of your racing, or your videography. You are an inspiration because of your transparency and your troubleshooting abilities. Your troubleshooting abilities might actually be in the god-damned-hero category. The transparency is in the everyone-should-do-this-but-humans-suck-and-therefore-dont category. I appreciate that you are extremely honest about your mistakes and show us the whole process because that is honest and real.

  • @dougm2745
    @dougm274516 күн бұрын

    I worked with a R+D composite fabricator who started each of our projects with a trip to Home Depot for insulating foam. No degree no formal education, just smart. Of course they laid him off when money got tight…He obviously landed on his feet.

  • @Ducatista189
    @Ducatista18916 күн бұрын

    Painted a lot of this foam in architecture school. You can paint it with anything, but you have to hold the can at least 6-8” away from the foam. This allows the solvent in the paint to evaporate before hitting the foam and melting it. Takes more paint, but it is the way to do it.

  • @ItsDaJax

    @ItsDaJax

    16 күн бұрын

    I was looking into this foam to make models and sculptures, so that's good to know. Is there anything out there one can use to harden it, like is it porous enough to absorb something to harden it, or would paint be good enough? Because I briefly was looking at a thrown out couch and had to talk myself down from using the cushion to use because that foam is so soft, that I would need something for it to absorb and harden as I shaped it.

  • @lassikinnunen

    @lassikinnunen

    16 күн бұрын

    ​@@ItsDaJaxyou'd need open cell foam to get epoxy or something to not stop at the surface.

  • @thesuit4820
    @thesuit482016 күн бұрын

    Barbenhiemer. Your CNC has become the destroyer of foam. You're just Matt.

  • @piscinabuquet9936
    @piscinabuquet993616 күн бұрын

    Always a good day when there's a superfast Matt video

  • @AraniaTwoFer
    @AraniaTwoFer16 күн бұрын

    0:46 As soon as I saw the lead screw being covered in foam dust I immediately knew that this is going to be difficult AND expensive

  • @benjamint.minkler221
    @benjamint.minkler22116 күн бұрын

    I think people stress too much when making a 'buck' for a form: 1) they can be made out of anything, esp in the center if not just hollow(and by 'anything' I mean even bags of trash inside) the materials used and colors don't matter, as long as just the very surface is good; and it doesn't have to last long, cue the ham sandwich for this if anything 2) while the final shape here is important to accurately match your design, not all pieces have to be cut from solid full blocks(you could rough out most of the shapes in glued together scraps, and of course leave voids that aren't near the surface) think about all the material you needlessly wasted by just grinding it into so much dust - and once you have the tricky bits cut that must be right and define the shape, just slap boring mostly flat or smoothly curved(bent) thinner sheets on by eye to fill in-between(like the sides or top) and shape by hand with saw/files/sander 3) no need to have all the foam sheets stacked all in one orientation, if one area needs to be mostly flat just use a flat sheet going that way instead of trying to make a flat area from so many edges of stacked sheets, which would be much harder and the worse way to make and finish a flat from many different levels of edges and glue seams 4) caned spray foam is 'great stuff' to fill gaps and stick things together - to get around the mess use plastic sheet in-between the project and yourself/floor, and because the foam when cured doesn't stick to the plastic you can cover the growing foam with it and shape it nearly exactly how you want(vs out of control blobs) even adding layers of thinly spread foam squishing it around(thru the plastic) with your hands and small cardboard to get it totally smooth; this would be the "additive" method of sculpting vs only removing material and can fix any area where you removed too much 5) you aren't going to keep this part! this buck will either be a 'use once' as a positive mold and destroyed(or just left in), or used to make a negative mold to make multi parts from that - so no need to go nuts on the structure and strength, that only makes it harder to break apart and trash

  • @julianrossi8460
    @julianrossi846016 күн бұрын

    The day we all wanted but never expected: the making of the body. Rejoice!

  • @JSG1901
    @JSG190116 күн бұрын

    "Moldless construction." I built an entire carbon fiber Porsche Boxster body this way but I didn't know that's what it was called. Thanks for the new term! Love your channel, BTW.

  • @alekonicolacakis7002
    @alekonicolacakis700216 күн бұрын

    Well I have an engineering class rn but I guess I'll watch this instead, surely I will learn a similar amount

  • @mackmcmillan9905
    @mackmcmillan990516 күн бұрын

    To make a fiberglass body for a racecar, you first need a mold..." ("And NOT the kind growing in my vertical stabilizer.") -Matt, probably

  • @ofp8574
    @ofp857416 күн бұрын

    It is nice to know that I am not the only one who ends up trying to do something a cheap and easy way and ends up spending more money and more time and energy than I would have doing basically anything else. Best way to look at that in my opinion, is to just know there would be unforseen problems with whatever route you took. Some people have lots of luck and everything works out for them every time. Some other people, you can put ten times the time and effort into something and have it all fall apart. It used to bother me, but I got used to it.

  • @80spodcastchannel
    @80spodcastchannel16 күн бұрын

    Hey Matt when your done..paint it gray, add a few flippers and tail, and sell it as a scale dolphin or whale model.. recoup your losses!!!!!

  • @fatcamp907
    @fatcamp90716 күн бұрын

    Matt, if you check with roofing companies in the area they might have left over foam from projects that they'd let to cheap. Come of the pieces can be really big, and are usually high density.

  • @bake162
    @bake16216 күн бұрын

    Nice of you to share the foam with the neighbors

  • @m0rph171
    @m0rph17116 күн бұрын

    Looking good! Latex paint should work well and then you can work with the cheaper poly or vinylester resin. You can drill a couple of holes for compressed air (put a pipe/straw in there) to help pop out the shell, plug them with wax or play-doh before you laminate. Any additional advantage is good. Use multiple thin layers of fiberglass rather than thick ones, easier to laminate with a roller. Sand the shell before popping it out by hand with a long flexible ply board with handles, hot glue or staple the sand papers. Sand systematically with long passes along the part, should be quite quick if you have the correct grit. Another way is to sand the whole body when all parts are installed, then you can do even longer passes with the sanding board tool. And in case you make a mold from a plug, careful with removal agents and gelcoat, the agent can cause spider web like defects, I prefer to use only wax. Spray-on removal agents are safer then brushing, but in any case don't use much. With only wax you can get a bit of a suction-cup effect, depends on the part.

  • @chrislee7817
    @chrislee781716 күн бұрын

    You could strengthen your router tube by running a wire down the center and tension it . If the wire is forced down at the centre point (slug of ally with an offset hole) it will add some upthrust. You can calibrate it with the amount of tension you put it under. 😊

  • @freeidaho-videos
    @freeidaho-videos16 күн бұрын

    I just signed up for Ground News, based on a single recommendation from some guy on the internet. I'm also an engineer and watch your videos because they are the quintessential combination of engineering skepticism, sarcasm, and persistence. One of my favorite sayings, that I made up is: My momma taught me that persistence pays off. The thing she forgot to tell me and I didn't know to ask was how damned slowly it pays off. Carry on!

  • @owensparks5013
    @owensparks501316 күн бұрын

    You can also machine the foam under size, slather it in filler, then machine again at the correct size to get a hard shell.

  • @philipgrice1026
    @philipgrice102616 күн бұрын

    Matt. You need to get a four axis laser alignment tool. They are now quite inexpensive, at least the Korean ones like I have. After wasting man months or even year of times with rulers tape measures and carpenters squares, one of my subcontractors gave me one when he upgraded. It is brilliant. Self leveling, use just the axis you need, or as many as required, lock it and rotate to handle non-square alignments, etc., etc. If you do, get a green laser, not a red one. The green is more visible in normal daylight, even outdoors, but not in bright sunlight. I think you'd need a military grade one for that. 😇

  • @davidg3944

    @davidg3944

    14 күн бұрын

    Let us know the vendor and part numbers for your laser aligner? Thanks!

  • @billiefox1149
    @billiefox114916 күн бұрын

    I love this channel, it allows me to have realistic expectations in my projects

  • @scottcates

    @scottcates

    16 күн бұрын

    +1

  • @MrRyanTrott
    @MrRyanTrott16 күн бұрын

    My favourite channel, perfect blend of engineering, automotive and entertainment.

  • @sparrow082
    @sparrow08216 күн бұрын

    Spray your fome down with polycrylic before you use the wood filler. I got a $17 spray gun from Harbor Freight, and I use straight polycrylic. It takes two or three coats to get a decent hardness on the surface, but it only takes about 10 minutes to dry between coats in warm, dry air. Then you get a uniform sanding surface

  • @amandahugankiss4110
    @amandahugankiss411016 күн бұрын

    going to steal that vacuum hold-down system. looks perfect for me.

  • @krazed0451

    @krazed0451

    16 күн бұрын

    Just buy a commercial vac bed if you need to be held down, ya kinky bastard 😂

  • @aaronb7990
    @aaronb799016 күн бұрын

    So much foam!!! That's one of those projects you remember 10 years from now when you find a pile of foam dust inside a box that was slightly cracked open. 😆🤙

  • @fredygump5578
    @fredygump557816 күн бұрын

    Matt, the internet told me that I am dumb, because I spent a lot of money on a Shopsabre CNC and a proper dust collector. They said I should have bought a onefinity machine and a harbor freight dust collector and saved tons of money. So thanks for validating my decision to buy the real thing!

  • @christofschwarz6602
    @christofschwarz660216 күн бұрын

    @14:55: aaaaand thats the reason tooling foam exists :P It can also be coated with Automotive paint filler and sanded extra smooth, ....

  • @oxide7
    @oxide716 күн бұрын

    I end up going down this same path on 90% of my projects. Start with the least important part cus you know you're doing something you have no business trying. Fail, learn, fail, learn, finally make it good enough. Can be a challenge to keep the spirits up sometimes haha.

  • @hedrives
    @hedrives16 күн бұрын

    Matt, I just LOVE your channel. As an ex-salt racer in caars and bikes, I'm really enjoying your streamliner build.

  • @charlieyocum9948
    @charlieyocum994816 күн бұрын

    “As long as everything works the first time” - Oh, foreshadowing!

  • @jort93z

    @jort93z

    16 күн бұрын

    Did any of his projects work the first time? i can't remember a single one.

  • @RobM184

    @RobM184

    16 күн бұрын

    ​@jort93z the first ham sandwich

  • @adriankoch964

    @adriankoch964

    16 күн бұрын

    They can't, otherwise the video would be too short.

  • @wojciechbieniek4029
    @wojciechbieniek402914 күн бұрын

    When you've been assembling the mill, i've been thinking "how does he square the rails?" And when the pieces were misaligned it hit me, you didn't :) I'm glad you've been able to find the root of this problem

  • @strykenine7902
    @strykenine790216 күн бұрын

    Man, I have never seen someone who needs a 3 car garage more than Matt.

  • @lbgstzockt8493
    @lbgstzockt849316 күн бұрын

    When tasked with the choice between the easy but expensive option and the cheap but hard one I tend to chose the hard and expensive one.

  • @mrbuttons1243
    @mrbuttons124316 күн бұрын

    Years ago at my work our films department used a ton of that pink foam to make a fake log cabin set for a live stream event that was going to happen. They used a miter saw to make all the big cuts. 6 months later we were still finding pink dust everywhere on that floor.

  • @camerone397
    @camerone39716 күн бұрын

    neat stuff. Been watching my school's FSAE aero team do pretty much this for the last two months so this is an interesting alternate viewpoint. (Yes, we are behind.)

  • @bedlamite42
    @bedlamite4216 күн бұрын

    10 seconds in I was expecting a joke about a ham sandwich sitting in the back of the garage for way too long.

  • @scottcates

    @scottcates

    16 күн бұрын

    SFM did not disappoint :D

  • @11Mrfreak
    @11Mrfreak16 күн бұрын

    9:36 rctestflight has a bunch of nice videos on printed cyclone separators, he used it for "exploded barbie foam" aswell but his design was quite a bit wider

  • @isaacplaysbass8568
    @isaacplaysbass856816 күн бұрын

    Your solution serves as both inspiration, and an illustration of things to consider.

  • @jonathantatler
    @jonathantatler16 күн бұрын

    Always a good day when a 'SuperfastMatt' video pops up.

  • @kaiserruhsam
    @kaiserruhsam16 күн бұрын

    no ham sandwich? can i at least get a taco in there instead

  • @elektro3000
    @elektro300016 күн бұрын

    I've been using that same HF shop vac for years (including for dust collection) and I agree, those bags make life SO much easier.

  • @krashanb5767

    @krashanb5767

    16 күн бұрын

    Do you reuse yours? They can be cut open for emptying.

  • @elektro3000

    @elektro3000

    15 күн бұрын

    @@krashanb5767 I've actually just been dumping it out through the hole. Doesn't empty it 100% but I get it about 90% empty if I shake it.

  • @cavedog1279
    @cavedog127916 күн бұрын

    Conventional milling has more tear-out, not climb. You're clearly using climb milling (in some of the shots, although now I'm seeing conventional in others) so I'm sure you know that, just wanted to clarify in case someone watching wants to learn a bit about cnc, which they definitely should. Climb milling is heavily discouraged on hand routers as it is inherently more dangerous, however a CNC does not care because it is a robot, so it is generally preferable to climb mill in most situations. Conventional milling is like trying to paddle a canoe as it is moving backwards through the water, the medium fights you the entire way. Climb milling is like paddling a canoe that is heading forward.

  • @timplett1

    @timplett1

    16 күн бұрын

    Depends on the material. I have (basically) the same CNC as he does and when cutting wood, conventional milling provides a noticeably better surface finish than climb.

  • @tomcoon9038

    @tomcoon9038

    16 күн бұрын

    @@timplett1 As a toolmaker, I can attest to the fact that you are correct. To add to it, cutting plastics will "glue" the chips back onto the part behind the cutter when climb milling because of the heat. Same with aluminum unless coolant is used.

  • @leftfootfirst9847
    @leftfootfirst984716 күн бұрын

    I use a shellac primer to seal the foam before pulling a part from it. It leaves a really hard candy shell that you can wax for mold release. Looking good tho!

  • @meganwinters5163
    @meganwinters516316 күн бұрын

    No ham sandwiches... Dang Matt... What about turkey..? It's more Aerodynamic 🤣🤣🦃🤣🤣

  • @Gunbudder
    @Gunbudder16 күн бұрын

    the best way to make a mold is to go to Missouri in the summer, buy a loaf of fresh made bread from the bakery and put the loaf of bread in your cupboard. wait about 15 seconds, and you will have a nice loaf of mold.

  • @KarpucMotoring
    @KarpucMotoring14 күн бұрын

    The vacuum trick for holding the foam is super neat...! Something about the way Matt talks makes the videos enjoyable to watch. Straight to the point and funny

  • @bob.w3984
    @bob.w398416 күн бұрын

    Need to create a opposing charge on the foam or groud it all.

  • @rincam5
    @rincam516 күн бұрын

    definitely should invest some time in a metal table for that cnc machine 😂

  • @Lunarmobiscuit
    @Lunarmobiscuit16 күн бұрын

    Those separators don’t do well with sawdust either. My solution was a 32 gallon trash can, with the inlet as the separator, the outlet of the separator taped over, and a new outlet cut into the trash can lid. With that the dust has to make a 90 turn to leave the can, and at least for sawdust, most ends up at the bottom of the can. For the foam dust, I’d try covering the outlet hole with a piece of screen or a layer of paper/fabric from one of those vacuum trash bags. If this works the added benefit is 32 gallons of dust in a cheap plastic trash bag instead of 9-10 gallons in expensive vacuum trash bags.

  • @sideburnie
    @sideburnie16 күн бұрын

    kudos for publishing your struggles with CNC trueness and squareness. i'm about to get one, and i'm sure it'll save me a bunch of headache down the line.

  • @johnjuiceshipper4963
    @johnjuiceshipper496316 күн бұрын

    Love seeing the exact same materials get used by miniature diorama KZreadrs and landspeed record KZreadrs.

  • @AlexanderBurgers

    @AlexanderBurgers

    16 күн бұрын

    ...I guess next up we will see plaster, brown paint, and PVA glue for static grass? :D

  • @jacksonjohnson4182
    @jacksonjohnson418216 күн бұрын

    I made lots of parts like this and we used epoxy after machining to use as a harder surface for sanding. Though that might be more expensive for you, we could buy it in rather large batches, but worked great!

  • @paulketchupwitheverything767
    @paulketchupwitheverything76715 күн бұрын

    I've got a production car with a fiberglass body and started using resin and matting for small repairs to it. Since then I've used it for adding a durable, contoured surface to various objects or for adding a strengthening backing or reinforcement to all kinds of things. I don't use a mold, as you should for a smooth finish. I paint some resin on to the surface, lay dry matting on then apply more resin onto it all. This avoids resin soaked matting from disintegrating when handling it. I then build up a few layers repeating the process and spray paint it once cured. I know it's not the recommended way of using the stuff to get maximum strength out of the material, but it has allowed me to repair plenty of things where gluing it wouldn't last and where a textured surface finish isn't essential.

  • @ShawnChristopher10101
    @ShawnChristopher1010116 күн бұрын

    I love your videos, they remind me that no matter how much practicum there is, experience is the real teacher.

  • @ejgrant5191
    @ejgrant519114 күн бұрын

    Pretty AWESOME STUFF. My friend in the SF Bay Area Bob Wirth builds lots of SCTA Bonneville motors including bikes. His R&D shop is amazing and he told me the tale of a few years back about the "CnC Routing Method" to shaping the modern streemliners....I'm pretty sure the case he described was from a "bottomless checkbook" racer involved tens of thousands of $$$ in the design & shaping of the body. Your skills & innovations are amazing! Job well done! I'm sure you have a great handle on things but, if you ever start struggling with your powerplant....Bob is the MAN! His services and skills were employed during the AckAttack's record setting venture....Bob didn't build or design that machine, he was just brought in when they were struggling and made the best with what was there to work with. You can see bits of his AMAZING SHOP when they did "Dyno Testing" in the documentry that aired on the Discovery Channel.

  • @JWbrasser
    @JWbrasser16 күн бұрын

    top tip for spray painting foam, use more distance, its actually dissolving in the propellant gas not the paint (unless its solvent based paint which would surprise me a little, a lot of those rattle cans are water based these days...)

  • @napalmholocaust9093
    @napalmholocaust909316 күн бұрын

    One 24"/ 50 micron bag is like 15 bucks on ebay. My dust collector cost that, plus one ratchet strap to hold it to the base of an old shop vac with that diameter as the ring betweenthe bag and the fan. The rest was free stuff so milage varies. Its the fan that gets ya. My inline 6 with a 24" diameter came from a scaredy cat's clandestine greenhouse and probably cost 500 or more new.

  • @chrisreed3515
    @chrisreed351516 күн бұрын

    Hey Matt - you might want to try light weight topping compound instead of regular drywall mud. It's noticeably softer and easier to sand.

  • @Ebbyman413
    @Ebbyman41316 күн бұрын

    There was a time that some random guy on the Internet told me to 'hail the algorithm', so I did... he was right... it totally worked! All Hail the Algorithm!

  • @BenMitro
    @BenMitro16 күн бұрын

    Nice one Freddy. If you could rotate the CNC head in two directions, then you could fit a hot knife in place of the router and save on all that foam dust/chips. Ofcourse, that means possibly new CNC software with more dimensions of freedom, wiring, motors and a 2D rotation assembly mounted in place of the router (I guess this would look like a universal joint?)

  • @thecheese302
    @thecheese30216 күн бұрын

    such an inspiration. thank you for going through the challenges so much of doing this work you do.

  • @mrzmaster2
    @mrzmaster216 күн бұрын

    Use vinyl on your mould for a nicer surface finish and release!

  • @sytran666
    @sytran66613 күн бұрын

    I fine tune the squareness on my machine by making a cut down the Y axis then across the X axis, measure the squateness of the actual cut, if adjustments are needed i turn the slave axis off momentarily(Y2), move Y1 up or down towards the direction of square, repeat the process until fully square.

  • @junkopotomus
    @junkopotomus15 күн бұрын

    I do a lot of miniature modeling with XPS. The best route for painting would be to make a wash with Modge Podge, water and paint color of your choice. You can apply with a roller, or brush as it self levels pretty well. After that has dried, you can also now spray paint it for more even coverage and the solvents will not eat the away at it. I haven't made a 20 foot object before so there maybe some scaling in the procedure I haven't thought of.

  • @Narwaro
    @Narwaro16 күн бұрын

    There is an easy, expensive way and a hard, cheap way. My way is both hard and expensive 💁‍♀

  • @JosephMarkusic
    @JosephMarkusic13 күн бұрын

    What I have found that works well with finishing the foam bucks or make molds is to coat with epoxy once you have the basic shape. I usually have really old stuff around that I don’t want to use for finished parts anyway. Then I use either 30 or 45 minute mud (the stuff in bags) which dries pretty fast and sands easy. When “done”, another coat of epoxy gets the finish close and and makes ti less likely to deform.

  • @AaronHendu
    @AaronHendu14 күн бұрын

    Latex house paint can be used to "prime" the foam...flat cieling paint works great and goes with the drywall filler well. After the latex has curef, you can use some spray paints on top. I tested that rustoleum 2x and some rubberized auto undercoating on a scrap piece about 6 months ago and no bubbling or lifting has occured. I also tested several types of silicone caulk and adhesives which melt foam and the latex paint primer worked there as well.

  • @corychristensen5917
    @corychristensen591716 күн бұрын

    Extend your garage.... genius. The permits and supplies will be cheaper in the long run.. BTW I love your videos. Keep it up

  • @patrickfreeman8257
    @patrickfreeman825716 күн бұрын

    Thank you for the heads up on ground news. I'm always looking for the truth. I will definitely give them a shot.

  • @brennanlukas5467
    @brennanlukas546714 күн бұрын

    my highschool used this same foam for prototyping in our engineering class, we had pretty good luck with the oneida dust deputy dust separator to keep the chips out of the vacuum. we were producing smaller chips though so that may be factor

  • @FunnyOneFunnyOne
    @FunnyOneFunnyOne16 күн бұрын

    I learn so much from your mistakes. Thanks Matt. This is a fun adventure.

  • @GustafsonBen
    @GustafsonBen13 күн бұрын

    I don't do cars other than my 98 xj... but I do woodworking, and its nice to see someone else try to track down problems and fix them... there are always problems...

  • @roi354
    @roi35415 күн бұрын

    I was about to say buy a cyclone but not the small one as the air velocity would be too fast to separate the foam from the air. But you did. Oh well. If you go out and buy a second cyclone, add it to a second bin, and adapt the vacuum duct so you split it into two before the cyclones, you'll likely be able to separate to your heart's content. There are duct calculations for this (I know, it's my job) but - without the hassle - if you can slow the suction enough to separate but still extract from the workpiece you'll have success.

  • @justaeropaul
    @justaeropaul8 күн бұрын

    im the aero lead for my schools sae team and we've been using 3m grey multipurpose duct tape as mold reliese. It works great for west systems 105 epoxy and ducttape is SOOO much cheaper than release films and teflon tape!!

  • @oikkuoek
    @oikkuoek16 күн бұрын

    On any coat/fairing compound, always check the thinning and hardening agents. These are the ones reacting with your bulk medium. You can also add the barbie dust to an epoxy and apply that for harder edge, which can be later on faired with regular bondo. The epoxy goop has similar consistency as the bondo, so these two can be sanded to a smooth finish. Much more important bit is how you are going to 1. Attach this Speeldo to your existing structure so that it holds on both runs? Panel gluing bandages with threads sticking through is common, also this makes the skin flap in the breeze like used raincoat. It needs some sort of structure to stiffen it, and this needs to be designed into the mold. You can panel glue the inner structure to the outer skin, in fact this semi elastic bond edge holds best of all the options, but you still need the mating surface to be exact. 2. How are you going to attach these outer skin parts to each other? You need to machine every seam into the mold. Yes it's possible to hand craft these over lays afterwards, if you have 25 years of experience in hand carving precise mating surfaces. But after seeing your skill set, I whole heartedly suggest you design the mating surfaces of these pieces into your CAD, before you cut them out. Again, if you had simply pulled the car apart, added the attachment points to your frame, wrapped the frame in plastic/cardboard and sprayed two boxes of spray insulation on top of that, sanded, added some epoxy to the dust and plastered the mix back on, sanded again, another round of epoxy dust goop, sand, bondo, sand, latex, fiber glass, sand, bondo, sand, paint and done. Maybe a week. Real, successful land speed racers are all done by hand. This CAD/CNC nonsense is just a waste of time. When the effort is lost in spinning a virtual model around inside incomplete program, the essence of land speed racing is lost, and the end result will never be anywhere near the goal.

  • @gregpetroski6333
    @gregpetroski633315 күн бұрын

    this was the method i used to make my wing. It works fine, just time consuming. eating away the foam while sanding is definitely a pain. I ended up doing a thin fiberglass layer (3oz plain weave i think) with epoxy (as polyester will eat the foam) to give me a solid base for further coating and sanding to smooth the surface. Extremely time consuming but I did the drywall filler too and it works fine.

  • @AaronHendu
    @AaronHendu14 күн бұрын

    Also...I spent good money playing with this foam and different adhesives...and I found Gorilla Glue type 2 water resistance the best for the price. A gallon is about $30 and it has held up to a full Canadian winter in the elements with zero lifting or ill effects. I used it to bond all the foam, and as the base adhesive for the poor man's fiberglass lamination process. I tested tightbond type 2, foam spray adhesive, several caulk gun tube adhesives and the cheap Gorilla glue worked as good as anything for far less $$$.

  • @RealBLAlley
    @RealBLAlley16 күн бұрын

    For task lighting take a look at the Westek Citro LED modules at Menards. They are inexpensive but very good quality, and come in three sizes. They can be linked directly or with an included short jumper, and are direct plug-in, so no transformer.

  • @Azulevo
    @Azulevo14 күн бұрын

    I tried almost exactly your process 9 months ago. Same 2” foam. Onefinity. Ballnose EM. I did get special foam glue. I think the rear of my “race car” had about 40 parts. The joint compound sanding was a chore.. I’m looking forward to see how that goes.

  • @CreaminFreeman
    @CreaminFreeman15 күн бұрын

    I only started watching your videos a little bit ago but I think your channel came at me right when I needed it. I’ve been sitting unmotivated to work on the project car. Today I marathoned a bunch of your videos starting from the bottom. Another thing I did today was paint the shift linkage on my project car. The thing I’ve been dreading (and I don’t know why) is putting the cables back on the A/C controls on the dash the same way they came back in. But hey, the shift linkage is painted so I’m basically almost done!

  • @planespeaking
    @planespeaking16 күн бұрын

    As weight isn't an issue trying Toupret Joint skim and fill to smooth the foam mould. It's sands super easy and is a very fine finish. Cheap too.

  • @DanBowkley
    @DanBowkley13 күн бұрын

    3M Marine Acryl-White Glazing Putty. The stuff is amazing. Since you're using XPS the pore size is small enough that you won't use a ton of it, which is good since it's like $2/oz. But it sands like a really good dream. Definitely use it between the fiberglass body and the sanding primer before painting.

  • @4redwings
    @4redwings13 күн бұрын

    I watched a youtube foam model maker test glues for foam a few years ago and the best was Gorilla Glue Construction Adhesive (it comes in a caulk tube). It is strong and the hot wire cuts right through it. I use it to make molds for fiberglass airplane parts. It works great.

  • @TheRalliowiec
    @TheRalliowiec15 күн бұрын

    You can "slightly" cut and snap XPS foam just like drywall, so no hot wire needed. Also...dont let the CNC do all the work. If your shape involves hogging out half of the material than roughly trim off that material with a knife beforehand. May not necessarily save time, but it will save on the pink fluff.

  • @mcskifter
    @mcskifter13 күн бұрын

    Put the suck and blow sides of the vac into the tent. Keeps air moving and clears things fast. Add a little exhaust bypass to outside to keep the tent slightly negative pressure.

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