Billet Helmet

Started by NAKID, February 01, 2010, 06:06:01 PM

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MendoDave

Think of all the new handlebars you could make with that.

numbskull


Tekneek

Quote from: TAftonomos on February 02, 2010, 02:05:01 PM
Thats downright cheap, sign me up for one please
[thumbsup] [cheeky]

Haha...I was just kidding about him putting out a few batches. I just had to get everybody's panties moist. I DID run the link by him though and he seemed fairly unimpressed with the technology involved. In his line of work, I'm sure he routinely sees more elaborate machining taking place on a daily basis out of much more exotic materials. I still think that helmet is probably the coolest chunk of metal I'll see in 2010. Very nice!

mitt

To the OP - very cool video.  Maho stuff is not cheap.

mitt

powerhammer

Quote from: Monsterlover on February 02, 2010, 07:10:03 AM
Was he serious?  And if so, how?

Material would cost more than that alone.

Machine time would cost more than that alone.

I'll take a case of 10.

;D


Titanium is expensive but not that much more expensive than naval bronze.   I just got a quote for 1 inch round by 5 feet long of grade 2 titanium for 225$.  The helmet in that video can't be full size based on the size of the turrets and bits in the video.

Regardless, it's a sweet demo of what you can do on a 5 axis machine.

mitt

Quote from: powerhammer on February 06, 2010, 05:00:56 PM

The helmet in that video can't be full size based on the size of the turrets and bits in the video.



It takes a pretty big block of aluminum to weight 240 pounds (120kg).  I bet it is pretty close to full size.

mitt

mitt

Quote from: mitt on February 07, 2010, 08:27:06 AM
It takes a pretty big block of aluminum to weight 240 pounds (120kg).  I bet it is pretty close to full size.

mitt

quick math break - 120kg = about 14" each side if it is a perfect cube = close if not full size.

mitt

Q777

I've often wondered why things like rearsets are still so expensive when someone with access to the machinery could produce them so quickly and easily once they've set up the program on a more basic CNC machine.

I built a car a few years back and had heaps of help from a friend who had access to an almost infinite supply of off-cut and discarded material that suited my needs perfectly.  He had the lathes and CNC machines to turn the junk bits of billet bar stock into works of art.  We joked that we should maybe CNC engrave the logo of the government department that he worked for onto some of the parts, in acknowledgement of what they had allowed us to create!

Monsterlover

Rearsets cost a lot because people line up to pay a lot.

;)
"The Vincent was like a bullet that went straight; the Ducati is like the magic bullet in Dallas that went sideways and hit JFK and the Governor of Texas at the same time."--HST    **"A man who works with his hands is a laborer.  A man who works with his hands and his brain is a craftsman.  A man who works with his hands, brains, and heart is an artist."  -Louis Nizer**

Popeye the Sailor

Quote from: Q777 on February 10, 2010, 12:07:36 AM
I've often wondered why things like rearsets are still so expensive when someone with access to the machinery could produce them so quickly and easily once they've set up the program on a more basic CNC machine.


Say you had a set up to build 'em.

Would you charge a handy inexpensive price for a small profit or as much as the market would bear?



If the state had not cut funding for the mental institutions, this project could never have happened.