An American Cinematographer Magazine 1932 article mentions that the UFA studios in Germany used DeBrie cameras synchronised with Tobis optical sound recorders. Would have this been a motorised Parvo L? I am aware DeBrie later produced a version (late 1930s ???) that was a little larger and marketed it as a 'Silent' camera when shooting sound films.
@Nateclapp28 күн бұрын
I don't know which cameras were used, but it is certainly possible it was an "L", as there were provisions for mounting external motors to the back.
@RememberNineEleven28 күн бұрын
@@Nateclapp Thanks for your reply.Further research revealed that DeBrie also made a Model LS - that had a sound proof build as listed in a 1931 catalogue so it could be used on 'talkies'.
@MajorGeneralHavoc8 ай бұрын
this was cool. thx man!
@cheapshotfishing923910 ай бұрын
I like how you skipped the part where you actually got the nuts loose. Which direction am I supposed to twist? Why are you using two wrenches? It would have been nice to explain any of that
@pricetag302 ай бұрын
Right tightly Lefty loosey
@tylernguyen170610 ай бұрын
Hello. Do you sell the 3d part, can i buy one from you pls?
@shawnblk6696Ай бұрын
I was gonna comment the same thing..he should make them for ppl to buy
@sysghost11 ай бұрын
About the tyres: I've discovered that lots of the "third party" manufactured tyres are slightly softer than the original Ninebot tyres and thus have a massively higher rolling resistance. With these my scooter struggles to keep up the speed even downhill. I have found that these "third party" tyre manufacturers varies in softness and thus the rolling resistance. The harder they are, the better they are. Sure I can buy original Ninebot tyres, but... no way in hell I'm paying $160 per tyre. ($320 for a set of two). NO WAY!
@ActinDude Жыл бұрын
Did you make the astrolabe? Was it from a kit? Thanks for the lesson on how to use it!
@Nateclapp Жыл бұрын
I bought mine from wavytail.com. I am very happy with it. It slants to more modern use (dates more than astrological signs, equation of time, which is a more modern feature of an astrolabe) well made and reasonably priced. I might make one out of metal in the future myself.
@taicho17 Жыл бұрын
please file for 3d printing
@Nateclapp Жыл бұрын
www.thingiverse.com/thing:4191167
@wholeladalovenorthernireland Жыл бұрын
Where is the file for this?
@Nateclapp Жыл бұрын
www.thingiverse.com/thing:4191167
@jc51373 Жыл бұрын
what a nightmare of a job. Who's got time for this I'd rather buy a new scooter.
@andymartinez1426 Жыл бұрын
😂
@fionalang2700 Жыл бұрын
Very good explanation, but the whole video is somehow too dark or underexposed, what a pity!
@RS-oj3zp Жыл бұрын
Just going to buy a new scooter, way too much work for me. I’d get impatient, why on earth will ninebot make it this hard?!!
@aronrobertszabo Жыл бұрын
Just take it to a repair shop. Do you also throw away your car when you need to change a tire?
@RS-oj3zp Жыл бұрын
If my car cost $500 new and the labor to fix a part is this intensive; yes
@aronrobertszabo Жыл бұрын
@@RS-oj3zp in my opinion, if reparation costs 499$ you should repair it. Why? You give money to a local repair shop and less garbage is produced. Throwing away something just because you have the money to buy a new one is not a smart thing to do. I've just replaced my tire in an hour or so. I can send you the printed tool for free, just dont throw it away m8!
@ImportedFromSerbia2 жыл бұрын
Orientation of tire's threads are matter for water puddles, only.
@ImportedFromSerbia2 жыл бұрын
The covers you took off a wheel fork gotta be marked with right or left on inside of the cover.
@michasmolarek80772 жыл бұрын
Ale partyzantka stare klucze zero pojęcia
@TDDP5742 жыл бұрын
Thanks !!
@WyantWin2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Nate!
@clintonsmith41662 жыл бұрын
STL for the jig???
@ruhnet2 жыл бұрын
Great stuff. Man they sure improved the loading process with later cameras! I'm sure in the 1950's the "old timers" made fun of anyone complaining about loading. :-D
@ruhnet2 жыл бұрын
This is very cool. Bravo.
@miguelangelsuarezcastellot35132 жыл бұрын
Hola buen video bro .si quisiera yo ponerle llanta de aire .se podría poner
@operatorpanther3 жыл бұрын
Very nice. Well this work on the E25A models too?
@leonmoxon93963 жыл бұрын
just retread with a hot knife....or vice press.and put the hub into a freezer
@tsegulin3 жыл бұрын
Fascinating - so the Wilart actually came after the Bell and Howell 2709? I had a little experience with one of those decades ago and it was pretty quick and simple to load by comparison. The Wilart does look beautifully and robustly made though. Not sure I get the logic of the open/close light traps and split magazines although European cameras like the Debrie Parvo had internal separate magazines. Thanks so much for this!
@Nateclapp3 жыл бұрын
Yes. The Wilart is essentially a metal version of a Pathé Professionelle, which I believe predates the 2709. I imagine Wilart was trying to capitalize on a cheap proven design, compared to state of art of say a 2709, which was a very expensive camera. Also due to WWI and after, access to European cameras were a bit limited, which I imagine made a space for Wilart as it was an American company.
@MrHumorization3 жыл бұрын
What was the Torx BO key number you used to remove the motor?
@Nateclapp3 жыл бұрын
The capped end of the motor? I don’t actually know, I have an assorted set of bits and just picked the one that fit w/out figuring the size.
@user-rg5nk5fd8g3 жыл бұрын
T25
@d4l43 жыл бұрын
Great video, the pix 240 is commonly used to record playback for the script supervisor even today, at least here in Sweden.
@xzraidenxthegod5043 жыл бұрын
Beauty
@MartyNZ643 жыл бұрын
Hi, Thanks for the demo and the jig. I can't find the link to the .stl file though and would like to print one. Could you please provide the link.
@Nateclapp3 жыл бұрын
www.thingiverse.com/thing:4191167
@emmettturner94523 жыл бұрын
@@Nateclapp Thanks! Could you put this in the description? The video and description mention a link but you have to dig through the comments for it. Also, did you print with PLA? ABS? PETG? Should I use a dense infill percentage? Extra perimeters? Thanks again!
@Nateclapp3 жыл бұрын
@@emmettturner9452 I used PLA and 20% infill. Depending on your hammering you might want more infill. After replacing 3-4 tires w it it spontaneously started to come apart on last one. Probably because it was only 20% infill. But I still got the tire on as it came apart. So 20% will work. More infill will make it more durable.
@emmettturner94523 жыл бұрын
@@Nateclapp Thanks! I’ve had the thing two weeks and the front tire is already getting bare. I can’t afford a car after a tornado recently crushed mine so I figure I’m gonna have to change my own tires to keep this thing economical. :) You’re a lifesaver!
@Nateclapp3 жыл бұрын
@@emmettturner9452 one thing I have not done but is an alternative is since tires are solid rubber you could carve some treads in it with a linoleum knife or something. Not sure how good it would work, but certainly faster than pulling whole wheel.
@johnlolos23373 жыл бұрын
Where did you get the tire from. I'm trying to find them online but they all have no reviews or negative reviews. Please help!
@Nateclapp3 жыл бұрын
I have bought them from Amazon and AliExpress. I think most negative reviews are because initially it looks like it will not fit unless you do steps like I did. All the ones I got worked fine, just a very tight fit.
@peterwatkinson46563 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this really interesting and informative video about the Parvo, a lovely example. May I ask, in the center of the mechanism there appears to be a row of vertical rods or tubes, is this a remote lubricating system? My earlier example does not have this.
@Nateclapp3 жыл бұрын
Yes that exactly what the tubes are. I didn’t know myself, but someone tipped me off to the oiling ports on the top and that solved the mystery of the metal tubes. Not sure when they started putting them in but it appears to be a late addition.
@peterwatkinson46563 жыл бұрын
@@Nateclapp Thank you, that is very interesting, a logical addition for ease of maintenance, as long as the oiling was not then overdone as a result!
@Nateclapp3 жыл бұрын
@@peterwatkinson4656 ha! Of course that’s exactly what I did when I realized that they were for, to make up for years of disuse. Fortunately the mess cleaned up easily enough and I at least could confirm nothing was plugged up.
@tsegulin3 жыл бұрын
Great video about a classic camera. Nothing emphasizes how original French engineering can be like their movie cameras and their older Citroen cars. I've worked mostly with Arri and Mitchell cameras but I had had a little time with an Eclair Cameflex and more with Eclair ACL cameras and frankly they represent a redefinition from first principles of what a movie camera should be. A guy I knew decades ago in Australia had an Ernemann camera with a wooden case and brass mechanics with which he used to shoot stop-motion. Wonder if it was a Debrie clone, like the Askania appeared to be? Parvo comes from the Latin "small". I never quite understood why smallness was so important. I would not have liked to have been a camera assistant with one of these cameras with the awkward 3 side loading. The Bell and Howell 2709 and Mitchell Standard cameras with the classic "Mickey Mouse" ears magazines were more bulky, but the were so much simpler to load from the operator's side only - less handling, less risk of film damage and much more heavily built magazines. Also having the motor coupling right next to the critical focusing eyepiece looks awkward for the operator - maybe it had to be removed for ground glass viewing? I couldn't quite see how the pilot pins were actuated - the viewing tube appears to be in the way. Some beautiful footage was hot with Debrie cameras and their clones. Thanks for going to the effort of making this.
@yanngendreau37393 жыл бұрын
I liked the constrast between old and new technology. Great short !
@sqrsy3 жыл бұрын
Great video, thanks! Is it possible to load a standard 100ft bulk roll of 35mm film?
@Nateclapp3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely. Only trick is dealing with the core of the bulk load vs the spindle of the mag.
@tomthetomicbom3 жыл бұрын
Need to replace tire
@tomthetomicbom3 жыл бұрын
How do u take off wheel want screw driver ?
@SimplyV3rna3 жыл бұрын
He could have printed a larger diameter one that will push the tire evenly when using the hammer.
@richmejia63343 жыл бұрын
So this must be the same procedure for the es3 as I read on Amazon where I just bought my tire from. And how long do these baby wheels last?
@Nateclapp3 жыл бұрын
i don't know how long they last. The ones I am replacing are off former fleet scooters I have pulled from local waterways. I have heard also of people just carving new grooves with a linoleum cutter. Since it is a solid tire I don't see why that wouldn't work, and delay having to pull the tire.
@TESRMorroblivionOfficial3 жыл бұрын
They last roughly 600 Miles
@zrsmith9312 жыл бұрын
My tires are 200 miles in and looking BAD… these don’t last long at all.
@bensonak473 жыл бұрын
holy shit that's more work than i was expecting... not going to do these rolling burnouts anymore lol
@octapc4 жыл бұрын
Nice!
@davidwood22564 жыл бұрын
The jig is a great idea, but who has access to a 3D printer? If you have a roll of duct tape or two and a couple of hours, a tapered jig can be fashioned. Start out with a diameter of duct tape roll slightly smaller than the inner diameter of the tire. Build up layers of duct tape in ~ 10 - 15 mm strips until a taper is generated that ends up the diameter of the metal rim. Cover at the end with a single piece of tape for smoothness. You'll need to cut out wedges from this piece to make it lie flat. Warm the tire up, then place dish soap on the tire and jig. Push the tire onto the jig, pound with rubber hammer as shown by Nate and the tire will be on. I just now did it for a Ninebot ES4 front tire. It really worked well. ForestDweller
@andanh83 жыл бұрын
please make a video with this idea.
@Row389 Жыл бұрын
Amazing
@blueaway704 жыл бұрын
Dalle mie parti questo lo chiamiamo lavoro di bassa macelleria .
@sijimo4 жыл бұрын
Great, but how to change the rear tire?
@PneumaticFrog4 жыл бұрын
You wont need to it doesnt wear out
@LordOcelot3 жыл бұрын
@@PneumaticFrog unless you use the back brake heavily
@mashedpotatoes53233 жыл бұрын
The rear tire is basically sealed on, the only way to get it off is to cut the plastic up a bunch and use a hammer to break it. I have a bunch of rear tires that I do this with to get replacements for the front.
@rengletalain4 жыл бұрын
dit you avec number from front bearing plz ?
@timothygoodyear95194 жыл бұрын
Any idea if this will work for the ES3?
@stephenlavrinenko4 жыл бұрын
Timothy Goodyear yes it’s the same procedure for the es3
@Mark-ly5mh4 жыл бұрын
Please take note that you need to use security torx for the 5 screws on the rim, super annoying to find out during the repair.. Anyway, thx for the video and the model, looking forward to try out the jig.. Made it with 20% infill and 4 wall lines, hopefully it won't snap :)
@EikKhay4 жыл бұрын
Great Idea, Thank you for your sharing video.Where can I buy jig ?
@Nateclapp3 жыл бұрын
there are places that will print the .stl file for you and mail it to you.
@Kenneth-wr5nt4 жыл бұрын
Hey, I'd love to print this out and use this but when I upload the file to Proto Labs for a quote, I have no idea what dimension unit I should use... it offers to print this thing in mm, cm, in, etc, but each selection keeps the default number of "units" (example: X: 50.000 in/mm/cm Y: 149.995 in/cm/mm Z: 149.989 in/cm/mm. I definitely don't want to build this thing to the wrong scale, so I'd like to ask you what units did you design this thing to be printed with? I can't find any specs in the README file or the zip folder. Posted this comment to MakerBot as well. Thanks for sharing.
@Kenneth-wr5nt4 жыл бұрын
Please disregard. Took very minimal sleuthing to find the tire radius is listed at 145 mm... I think I've found my units lol. Just couldn't find it until digging a little further. Thanks for the share.
@Kenneth-wr5nt4 жыл бұрын
2nd thought of the day. I do not own a printer. Third part quotes for making this party are absurd levels of costly. Would you be willing to print one of these at materials/labor/shipping cost, if I paid you directly? I would be very interested. I think most of these services are oriented around higher volume orders... I just can't justify paying $70 for a single plastic tool.
@Nateclapp3 жыл бұрын
@@Kenneth-wr5nt sorry I have been pretty busy moving during a pandemic. I would be open to this but I probably couldn't get to it for a month or so. still living out of boxes.
@torontorc46374 жыл бұрын
Great job, thanks for sharing👍🏼👍🏼
@HappyBeppie4 жыл бұрын
Where is the file?
@BananMormor4 жыл бұрын
www.thingiverse.com/thing:4191167
@Nateclapp4 жыл бұрын
Here is .stl file : www.thingiverse.com/thing:4191167/files
@MacEstelle4 жыл бұрын
Excellent video Nate. Excellent camera. I hope you get to shoot with often
Пікірлер
An American Cinematographer Magazine 1932 article mentions that the UFA studios in Germany used DeBrie cameras synchronised with Tobis optical sound recorders. Would have this been a motorised Parvo L? I am aware DeBrie later produced a version (late 1930s ???) that was a little larger and marketed it as a 'Silent' camera when shooting sound films.
I don't know which cameras were used, but it is certainly possible it was an "L", as there were provisions for mounting external motors to the back.
@@Nateclapp Thanks for your reply.Further research revealed that DeBrie also made a Model LS - that had a sound proof build as listed in a 1931 catalogue so it could be used on 'talkies'.
this was cool. thx man!
I like how you skipped the part where you actually got the nuts loose. Which direction am I supposed to twist? Why are you using two wrenches? It would have been nice to explain any of that
Right tightly Lefty loosey
Hello. Do you sell the 3d part, can i buy one from you pls?
I was gonna comment the same thing..he should make them for ppl to buy
About the tyres: I've discovered that lots of the "third party" manufactured tyres are slightly softer than the original Ninebot tyres and thus have a massively higher rolling resistance. With these my scooter struggles to keep up the speed even downhill. I have found that these "third party" tyre manufacturers varies in softness and thus the rolling resistance. The harder they are, the better they are. Sure I can buy original Ninebot tyres, but... no way in hell I'm paying $160 per tyre. ($320 for a set of two). NO WAY!
Did you make the astrolabe? Was it from a kit? Thanks for the lesson on how to use it!
I bought mine from wavytail.com. I am very happy with it. It slants to more modern use (dates more than astrological signs, equation of time, which is a more modern feature of an astrolabe) well made and reasonably priced. I might make one out of metal in the future myself.
please file for 3d printing
www.thingiverse.com/thing:4191167
Where is the file for this?
www.thingiverse.com/thing:4191167
what a nightmare of a job. Who's got time for this I'd rather buy a new scooter.
😂
Very good explanation, but the whole video is somehow too dark or underexposed, what a pity!
Just going to buy a new scooter, way too much work for me. I’d get impatient, why on earth will ninebot make it this hard?!!
Just take it to a repair shop. Do you also throw away your car when you need to change a tire?
If my car cost $500 new and the labor to fix a part is this intensive; yes
@@RS-oj3zp in my opinion, if reparation costs 499$ you should repair it. Why? You give money to a local repair shop and less garbage is produced. Throwing away something just because you have the money to buy a new one is not a smart thing to do. I've just replaced my tire in an hour or so. I can send you the printed tool for free, just dont throw it away m8!
Orientation of tire's threads are matter for water puddles, only.
The covers you took off a wheel fork gotta be marked with right or left on inside of the cover.
Ale partyzantka stare klucze zero pojęcia
Thanks !!
Thanks Nate!
STL for the jig???
Great stuff. Man they sure improved the loading process with later cameras! I'm sure in the 1950's the "old timers" made fun of anyone complaining about loading. :-D
This is very cool. Bravo.
Hola buen video bro .si quisiera yo ponerle llanta de aire .se podría poner
Very nice. Well this work on the E25A models too?
just retread with a hot knife....or vice press.and put the hub into a freezer
Fascinating - so the Wilart actually came after the Bell and Howell 2709? I had a little experience with one of those decades ago and it was pretty quick and simple to load by comparison. The Wilart does look beautifully and robustly made though. Not sure I get the logic of the open/close light traps and split magazines although European cameras like the Debrie Parvo had internal separate magazines. Thanks so much for this!
Yes. The Wilart is essentially a metal version of a Pathé Professionelle, which I believe predates the 2709. I imagine Wilart was trying to capitalize on a cheap proven design, compared to state of art of say a 2709, which was a very expensive camera. Also due to WWI and after, access to European cameras were a bit limited, which I imagine made a space for Wilart as it was an American company.
What was the Torx BO key number you used to remove the motor?
The capped end of the motor? I don’t actually know, I have an assorted set of bits and just picked the one that fit w/out figuring the size.
T25
Great video, the pix 240 is commonly used to record playback for the script supervisor even today, at least here in Sweden.
Beauty
Hi, Thanks for the demo and the jig. I can't find the link to the .stl file though and would like to print one. Could you please provide the link.
www.thingiverse.com/thing:4191167
@@Nateclapp Thanks! Could you put this in the description? The video and description mention a link but you have to dig through the comments for it. Also, did you print with PLA? ABS? PETG? Should I use a dense infill percentage? Extra perimeters? Thanks again!
@@emmettturner9452 I used PLA and 20% infill. Depending on your hammering you might want more infill. After replacing 3-4 tires w it it spontaneously started to come apart on last one. Probably because it was only 20% infill. But I still got the tire on as it came apart. So 20% will work. More infill will make it more durable.
@@Nateclapp Thanks! I’ve had the thing two weeks and the front tire is already getting bare. I can’t afford a car after a tornado recently crushed mine so I figure I’m gonna have to change my own tires to keep this thing economical. :) You’re a lifesaver!
@@emmettturner9452 one thing I have not done but is an alternative is since tires are solid rubber you could carve some treads in it with a linoleum knife or something. Not sure how good it would work, but certainly faster than pulling whole wheel.
Where did you get the tire from. I'm trying to find them online but they all have no reviews or negative reviews. Please help!
I have bought them from Amazon and AliExpress. I think most negative reviews are because initially it looks like it will not fit unless you do steps like I did. All the ones I got worked fine, just a very tight fit.
Thank you for making this really interesting and informative video about the Parvo, a lovely example. May I ask, in the center of the mechanism there appears to be a row of vertical rods or tubes, is this a remote lubricating system? My earlier example does not have this.
Yes that exactly what the tubes are. I didn’t know myself, but someone tipped me off to the oiling ports on the top and that solved the mystery of the metal tubes. Not sure when they started putting them in but it appears to be a late addition.
@@Nateclapp Thank you, that is very interesting, a logical addition for ease of maintenance, as long as the oiling was not then overdone as a result!
@@peterwatkinson4656 ha! Of course that’s exactly what I did when I realized that they were for, to make up for years of disuse. Fortunately the mess cleaned up easily enough and I at least could confirm nothing was plugged up.
Great video about a classic camera. Nothing emphasizes how original French engineering can be like their movie cameras and their older Citroen cars. I've worked mostly with Arri and Mitchell cameras but I had had a little time with an Eclair Cameflex and more with Eclair ACL cameras and frankly they represent a redefinition from first principles of what a movie camera should be. A guy I knew decades ago in Australia had an Ernemann camera with a wooden case and brass mechanics with which he used to shoot stop-motion. Wonder if it was a Debrie clone, like the Askania appeared to be? Parvo comes from the Latin "small". I never quite understood why smallness was so important. I would not have liked to have been a camera assistant with one of these cameras with the awkward 3 side loading. The Bell and Howell 2709 and Mitchell Standard cameras with the classic "Mickey Mouse" ears magazines were more bulky, but the were so much simpler to load from the operator's side only - less handling, less risk of film damage and much more heavily built magazines. Also having the motor coupling right next to the critical focusing eyepiece looks awkward for the operator - maybe it had to be removed for ground glass viewing? I couldn't quite see how the pilot pins were actuated - the viewing tube appears to be in the way. Some beautiful footage was hot with Debrie cameras and their clones. Thanks for going to the effort of making this.
I liked the constrast between old and new technology. Great short !
Great video, thanks! Is it possible to load a standard 100ft bulk roll of 35mm film?
Absolutely. Only trick is dealing with the core of the bulk load vs the spindle of the mag.
Need to replace tire
How do u take off wheel want screw driver ?
He could have printed a larger diameter one that will push the tire evenly when using the hammer.
So this must be the same procedure for the es3 as I read on Amazon where I just bought my tire from. And how long do these baby wheels last?
i don't know how long they last. The ones I am replacing are off former fleet scooters I have pulled from local waterways. I have heard also of people just carving new grooves with a linoleum cutter. Since it is a solid tire I don't see why that wouldn't work, and delay having to pull the tire.
They last roughly 600 Miles
My tires are 200 miles in and looking BAD… these don’t last long at all.
holy shit that's more work than i was expecting... not going to do these rolling burnouts anymore lol
Nice!
The jig is a great idea, but who has access to a 3D printer? If you have a roll of duct tape or two and a couple of hours, a tapered jig can be fashioned. Start out with a diameter of duct tape roll slightly smaller than the inner diameter of the tire. Build up layers of duct tape in ~ 10 - 15 mm strips until a taper is generated that ends up the diameter of the metal rim. Cover at the end with a single piece of tape for smoothness. You'll need to cut out wedges from this piece to make it lie flat. Warm the tire up, then place dish soap on the tire and jig. Push the tire onto the jig, pound with rubber hammer as shown by Nate and the tire will be on. I just now did it for a Ninebot ES4 front tire. It really worked well. ForestDweller
please make a video with this idea.
Amazing
Dalle mie parti questo lo chiamiamo lavoro di bassa macelleria .
Great, but how to change the rear tire?
You wont need to it doesnt wear out
@@PneumaticFrog unless you use the back brake heavily
The rear tire is basically sealed on, the only way to get it off is to cut the plastic up a bunch and use a hammer to break it. I have a bunch of rear tires that I do this with to get replacements for the front.
dit you avec number from front bearing plz ?
Any idea if this will work for the ES3?
Timothy Goodyear yes it’s the same procedure for the es3
Please take note that you need to use security torx for the 5 screws on the rim, super annoying to find out during the repair.. Anyway, thx for the video and the model, looking forward to try out the jig.. Made it with 20% infill and 4 wall lines, hopefully it won't snap :)
Great Idea, Thank you for your sharing video.Where can I buy jig ?
there are places that will print the .stl file for you and mail it to you.
Hey, I'd love to print this out and use this but when I upload the file to Proto Labs for a quote, I have no idea what dimension unit I should use... it offers to print this thing in mm, cm, in, etc, but each selection keeps the default number of "units" (example: X: 50.000 in/mm/cm Y: 149.995 in/cm/mm Z: 149.989 in/cm/mm. I definitely don't want to build this thing to the wrong scale, so I'd like to ask you what units did you design this thing to be printed with? I can't find any specs in the README file or the zip folder. Posted this comment to MakerBot as well. Thanks for sharing.
Please disregard. Took very minimal sleuthing to find the tire radius is listed at 145 mm... I think I've found my units lol. Just couldn't find it until digging a little further. Thanks for the share.
2nd thought of the day. I do not own a printer. Third part quotes for making this party are absurd levels of costly. Would you be willing to print one of these at materials/labor/shipping cost, if I paid you directly? I would be very interested. I think most of these services are oriented around higher volume orders... I just can't justify paying $70 for a single plastic tool.
@@Kenneth-wr5nt sorry I have been pretty busy moving during a pandemic. I would be open to this but I probably couldn't get to it for a month or so. still living out of boxes.
Great job, thanks for sharing👍🏼👍🏼
Where is the file?
www.thingiverse.com/thing:4191167
Here is .stl file : www.thingiverse.com/thing:4191167/files
Excellent video Nate. Excellent camera. I hope you get to shoot with often