Episode 34 is up
Most complex heater ducting ever. The next episode where they start bolting on the important bits (like the engine) should be good.
It was quite satisfying to watch parts getting bolted on. I got a chuckle out of the dynamat cutting gag too.
Pete. (l33t FS) said:DYNAMAT DOES NOT WORK THAT WAY
...okay, I feel better
Yeah, I was thinking the same. Aren't you generally supposed to put it in the centre of the panel, maybe covering ~50% of the area?
Notice how they didn't weigh it again after pouring a bunch of asphalt into the car :) No matter, simply watching the reassembly is really rewarding.
I'd like to know more about the carpet.
In reply to Pete. (l33t FS) :
Do you think maybe this episode was sponsored by Dynamat? To their credit, they did mention in passing that 30% surface coverage would do the job.
What I liked was that this episode shows how all the work creating clip holders and component passages is paying off. Abd yeah....those heater ducts I had already done the math on the effort to make the HVAC plenum, and if billed at shop rates around me it was around 10k. Then they do the ducts. This think should be shipped over for the Riddler
And people complain when they find out we charge money to install a completely different powertrain with 4x the power level :) Compared to a hot rod build, our cars were free.
The amount of forethought displayed in this build is staggering. A hole drilled five years ago turns out to have a logical purpose. We've seen this over and over again as they do the dry build and again as they assemble. We all respect Bad Obsession's bracket ability, but those of us who have done this sort of work are in awe of how thought out the whole thing is. Nick has an amazing blueprint in his head of exactly how it will all work, and I assume there are reams of documentation off-camera to make sure nothing gets overlooked.
Carpet info. Also, Richard's line in the episode was hilarious.
https://www.woolies-trim.co.uk/product/2057/hi-flex-lining-carpet-black
I enjoyed the last bit where Richard opens the box of wiring and says, "Oh, E36 M3."
I'm waiting for the part where they have to take something apart to put that thing they forgot, or deciding how to retain that thing they forgot to mount in the pre-build.
The hours and hours of video might be the most helpful part of the whole assembly ordeal.
I'm a little sad that it's so near completion. Three or four more episodes may be all we get. Of course, they have some other good projects and content coming. That truck is pretty rad.
barefootskater (Shaun) said:I'm a little sad that it's so near completion. Three or four more episodes may be all we get.
I kind of doubt that. They still have a long road ahead, although as pointed out, they did a LOT of pre-work so that final assembly should go smoothly.
I am surpised no mat went on the roof...or are they going to address that later on.
But yeah usually 25-35% panel coverage is all thats needed with diminishing returns going beyond that. At least with the stuff I use (makes dynamat look cheap)
I'm loving it. But, at the rate they are going, they may be too old to drive it by the time they are done.
eastpark said:Carpet info. Also, Richard's line in the episode was hilarious.
https://www.woolies-trim.co.uk/product/2057/hi-flex-lining-carpet-black
From that link: "Not suitable for heavy wear areas (footwells) but ideal for e.g. side walls". It did look kind of flimsy to me, but to be fair they didn't put it on the floorboards. I'd still be concerned about it wearing rapidly from incidental contact.
They'd be good at homebuilt aircraft. There's the piece you screw up, theres the piece you perfect, then theres the piece that goes on the airplane. You built it three times by the time you fly it.
Rigante said:In reply to stuart in mn :
they really need a 3d printer
The fender flares are printed. But printer people forget just effective good fabrication is, especially if you only want one of something.
Keith Tanner said:Rigante said:In reply to stuart in mn :
they really need a 3d printer
The fender flares are printed. But printer people forget just effective good fabrication is, especially if you only want one of something.
For as ridiculous as I imagine it was to build those hvac ducts, I can't imagine modeling them in CAD and then printing them would have taken any less time or effort, just a different kind of effort. Maybe if they also had a decent 3D scanner.
dps214 said:Keith Tanner said:Rigante said:In reply to stuart in mn :
they really need a 3d printer
The fender flares are printed. But printer people forget just effective good fabrication is, especially if you only want one of something.
For as ridiculous as I imagine it was to build those hvac ducts, I can't imagine modeling them in CAD and then printing them would have taken any less time or effort, just a different kind of effort. Maybe if they also had a decent 3D scanner.
If the aluminum ones are a bit wrong, you can hit them with a hammer. I'm guessing the printed ones would be less amenable to that.
The 3D printed fender flares were tons of hours and done in Spain ,
Agree the heater vents could have been done 3D printed but you really would need the car close-by as everything was modified compared to measuring a stock Mini ( in Spain)
I hope one day 3D scanners and software will be good enough to just scan what you want and press PRINT and off it goes ,
We are a long way from that now !
I wonder what they will do with Binky when finished ? It is too nice to run it offroad ,
If its done by Christmas I would be amazed !
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