Wednesday, October 15, 2025

3D Printed Customized Automobile Elements


See the wonderful 3D printed customized automobile components from Michael O’Brien, MatterHackers’ December Hacker of the Month. 

Posted on December 9, 2016

by

Rhonda Grandy

It might be an understatement to say that Michael O’Brien likes automobiles. Take one have a look at his Instagram, and you may see what I imply. He is absolutely immersed within the automotive trade; being lead engineer on the Roadster Store, I might think about that you simply’d need to be.

After we found that O’Brien (aka Magic Mike) was utilizing 3D printing to assist design and manufacture customized equipment for automobiles, we knew he needed to be featured as our December Hacker of the Month. 

3D printed customized gauge cluster for O’Brien’s Datsun 620

 


O’Brien was launched to 3D printing whereas attending Iowa State College, the place he had the chance to work together with early FDM machines for fast prototyping and half improvement. He not too long ago bought a LulzBot Mini for his private tasks, which has helped advance the visions he has for his designs. “Strong modeling has developed into such an awesome instrument and neighborhood through the years,” stated O’Brien, “however the revolution in inexpensive and obtainable 3D printing has lastly allowed me to take advanced components I design that will usually be troublesome and expensive to supply, and make them a practical last product with nice high quality and entry.”

Printing away on the LulzBot Mini

 


O’Brien is at present engaged on components and parts for his Datsun 620 undertaking, and you may comply with the progress right here. “For each my very own work and our work at The Roadster Store, 3D printing has allowed us to step out of the standard manufacturing strategies and design components and merchandise at a significantly sooner and extra advanced stage,” he explains.

Lots of the components that O’Brien designs and prints are automobile parts that can’t be discovered or are very costly to copy, so with the assistance of 3D printing and Solidworks, he’s in a position recreate iconic options for traditional automobiles. “It is easy to design a loopy advanced element when you’ve got the expertise, however most would agree that truly taking the digital imaginative and prescient and making a bodily element is all the time the toughest half,” he states, including that, “3D printing actually permits me to precise my creativity and let my designs present within the bodily realm, permitting lots of boundaries to be faraway from conventional manufacturing design.”

 

3D Printed offset-angled, 3 tier change assemblies

 


O’Brien primarily makes use of HIPS filament as his go-to materials. “I’ve discovered that it is warping and delaminating properties are the most effective I’ve used,” explains O’Brien, including that “ABS filament could be an in depth second, for these components that require the power and end-use properties on an element that will likely be utilized in automotive purposes. I additionally use T-Glase for any clear half designs.”

After I assume clear T-Glase and automobiles, my thoughts instantly goes to headlights and tail lights, which is seemingly what O’Brien has been experimenting with. “The great factor about printing with T-Glase for lighting is that the interior layering results of the print act as diffusion materials,” he explains, clarifying that “when designing lights (particularly tail lights), you will need to embrace diffusing designs and shapes with numerous angle altering aspects to assist unfold and scatter the sunshine right into a not-concentrated bloom of sunshine, and the interior ridge traces and “imperfections” left from 3D printing the clear supplies do a superb job of this.” 

He used this identical design ingredient for the illuminated rings round his Datsun 620’s change legend plates, which you’ll be able to see under. “Since I used to be utilizing LED lamps which have a really concentrated and slim mild beam, I used the uncooked T-Glase printed rings with their ridge traces assist diffuse and scatter the LED mild to a extra uniform glow,” stated O’Brien.

3D printed change legend plate for the Datsun 620

 


Illuminated change legend plate

 


I requested O’Brien if he had any ending methods for his prints which are used past prototyping, and that truly make it on a automobile – he is already a 3D printing purist: “for me, the terracing and layering results left on 3D prints are a part of the enjoyable of 3D prints. In a nerdy manner, it exhibits those who the half is certainly 3D printed, and I believe showcasing the pure tool-path traces and layers from the half speaks volumes to the standard of the printer and supplies used, so typically I don’t post-finish lots of my components.” O’Brien is a true maker showcasing each medium used to create his Datsun 620 construct.

Half on the Inferno 1969 Camaro designed by Chris Gray.

 


At present, O’Brien has roughly fifty 3D printed parts on his Datsun 620 construct. “I would anticipate the variety of printed components within the last truck to be within the couple a whole lot not less than,” exclaims O’Brien, explaining that, “wiring harness ends, bulkheads, and clips and clamps to carry issues into place will likely be used – emblems throughout the truck, door deal with bezels, tail lights and housings, mirror bases and stems, fuse holders, gasoline and brake plumbing clamps and holders….. there are such a lot of concepts working via my head that I do know 3D printing is the reply for!”

Take a look at extra of O’Brien and the Roadster Store’s tasks on their website and his Instagram. Under are some pictures of the Roadster Store’s most up-to-date construct: the Inferno 1969 Camaro, which not too long ago took the Goodguys Rod & Customized Affiliation ‘Gold’ Award on the The SEMA Present.

3D printed backing plates on the Inferno Camaro, designed by Chris Gray.

 


Remaining product of the 3D printed backing plates on the Inferno Camaro

 


The Inferno 1969 Camaro in all it is glory


Wish to be our subsequent Hacker of the Month? E-mail rhonda.grandy@matterhackers.com, and inform us about your 3D printed creation – you possibly can be featured in our subsequent e-newsletter. Hacker of the Month wins 3 free spools of PRO Collection PLA or ABS filament to additional their pursuit of 3D printing greatness.



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