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Creating truly 3D graphics by using a 3D printer?

Andy D

Active Member
This is something I have been thinking about & I'm sure someone, somewhere is already doing this;
What if for your higher end customers you offer true 3D in part of your graphics?
For example; in the image below, you added the guy & his wrench, 3D printed & wrapped with printed vinyl.
Even with a smaller 3D printer, you could print him in multiple parts right?

plumbing-van-wraps-in-buena-park.jpg
 

White Haus

Not a Newbie
huh? I don't understand what your saying

If I understand correctly, he's wondering if you could 3D print dimensional elements for vehicle graphics etc.

Super cool concept, and I'd love to know as well. The first concern that comes to mind is getting vinyl to stick to those plastics...not very familiar with what the 3D printing materials are but I would assume (you know what they say...) that they would be hard to adhere to. I wonder if painting would be an option?

This is probably the first application I've seen that would actually make good use of a 3D printer in our industry.
 

Boudica

Back to "educational purposes"
ohhh, so the dimension would be on the front of the shape, and the back would be flat - adhered to the vehicle. Would there be a lot of detail in the 3d print, or would it be like a silhouette bump? I would think it would be difficult to line up the print of the vinyl over the guy and his wrench.
but now that we are discussing this, I feel like I've seen this done some where. I'll try to remember where I saw this.
 

Gino

Premium Subscriber
Sounds like a neat idea, but ya know how many tree branches, kids and other things hanging out in tight alleys, driveways would scratch the living daylights outta that stuff ?? Maybe even dislodge it.
 

balstestrat

Problem Solver
It's super time consuming, expensive and you need to learn a lot of new stuff. Remember you have to actually make/model/scan the 3d model first. And unless you do thousands of copies you will be doing that a lot.
Did I already say expensive and time consuming?
 

White Haus

Not a Newbie
I guess if they had a huge fleet, it would be worth vacuum forming a mold then repeating them that way, but that's a good point that you would still initially have to design/scan the original.
 

Andy D

Active Member
ohhh, so the dimension would be on the front of the shape, and the back would be flat - adhered to the vehicle. Would there be a lot of detail in the 3d print, or would it be like a silhouette bump? I would think it would be difficult to line up the print of the vinyl over the guy and his wrench.
but now that we are discussing this, I feel like I've seen this done some where. I'll try to remember where I saw this.
I think you would wrap the vehicle like you would normally, print & wrap the element and attach it to the vehicle, maybe tap into it from the inside of the panel...
 

Andy D

Active Member
It's super time consuming, expensive and you need to learn a lot of new stuff. Remember you have to actually make/model/scan the 3d model first. And unless you do thousands of copies you will be doing that a lot.
Did I already say expensive and time consuming?
So down the road when the printers are bigger, cheaper, and faster, maybe you down load premade art like we do for clipart, like a pipe wrench on a plumber's truck....
Creating and offering 3D "clip art" might be a good business to start up?!?!?
 

brdesign

New Member
It could be printed in small pieces and glued together, something the size of that wrench would take several days to print one wrench, it's a very slow process. It would also require bondo / high build primer and lots of sanding to get a smooth surface. Just search on youtube "3d print mandalorian helmet" to see how much time and effort goes into making one prop helmet.

A router table capable of 3d routing would be more practical


This is something I have been thinking about & I'm sure someone, somewhere is already doing this;
What if for your higher end customers you offer true 3D in part of your graphics?
For example; in the image below, you added the guy & his wrench, 3D printed & wrapped with printed vinyl.
Even with a smaller 3D printer, you could print him in multiple parts right?

plumbing-van-wraps-in-buena-park.jpg
 

netsol

Active Member
andy

i am not sure why you would 3d print and cover with vinyl

you simply change fiber colors

we have a stratasys bst 1200, but the hot new ones are pantone compatable
 

jimbug72

New Member
Couldn't you also do multiple layers of thick vinyl cut and stacked to achieve a similar, yet more subtle effect, and wrap over that? Seems that would be easier to clean and less prone to damage than a hard plastic protrusion.
 

Robert Addo

New Member
So they did this on a tour bus promoting Black Sails. The skull is 3D, something like 6" deep:
Black_Sails_Bus_1170.jpg
Massivit_3.jpg

They actually used a Massivit if I remember correctly, that they used as a mold for vacuum formed plastic with printed graphics applied. The Massivit uses UV cured gel as opposed to melted filament, which when fully cured is close to a polycarbonate. It's a ton faster than FFF/FDM, but when you're looking at one print for 9 busses or 9 prints, the vacuum forming makes much more sense. Super cool stuff, but the market for this kind of stuff is just not in my area. Looking into Massivits lately, the big one was around $350k, which 'is not that bad', but the gel costs a ton, $100/kg, but that's not a problem if you jump on the subscription, all you can print gel up to 500kg @ $5k/month, but that's whether you print anything or not. Here's a link to the article featuring the bus. https://wideformatonline.com/news/wide-format-news/8215-3d-vehicle-wraps.html
this is great stuff. Love it. Am loving the "education"
 

Andy D

Active Member
Yes and no. The best color 3d printers are Mimaki and HP, but those are intended for interior elements. I'm not really certain what kind of strength one of those prints has, nor what sort of life it would have exposed to the sun and elements. Plus these are super slow printers compared to something like the massivit, though the parts are essentially finished when they come off the printer.
Plus if you're doing the majority of the project in printed vinyl, by wrapping the 3D effect, the colors and finish would be a better match , correct?
 

Andy D

Active Member
Very cool, but what is the white parts, part of the graphic of the material showing?
Edited to add: NM I'm a dummy, it's snow....
upload_2021-3-4_10-59-35.png
 
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