Ventilator assy, left

Started by Shadow989, 10:00:35 AM / 28-Nov-19

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Shadow989

Hi :)

I need left ventilator assy for my S12, car is LHD.

I'm from Croatia, so I need shipping to Croatia.

https://ibb.co/dkHmFVb

tgposkitt

#1
Good luck, these are among the most rare and sought after parts for S12s.

Shadow989

I tought so :/

Is anyone 3D printing those? 😁

JonB

#3
The entire assembly? Or just the slats?

Id suppose one could print the whole assembly, but it wouldnt but fun i dont think.

Im not sure how strong theyd be either. Ive printed some stuff, but those vents are delicate as is.

rednucleus

Schizo gave it a petty good try I think - but don't think much success

JonB

tragicomedy truly defines that part.

Resin didnt seem to work. Tooling for plastic would leave one thousands in the hole on demand.

And printing it i dont really want to touch. Theres no guarantee that the part wont break in 15 minuets.

To draw all the parts of the vent, then print all the parts, there's no way i can put that sort of time in something people would maybe pay $30 at the most for, and if your lucky you get ten sales, which a printer would probably have to run north of ten hours each to make.

If you want one part of it: a slat, the connecter, etc, let me know, and maybe ill make it just because I know theyre not out there and i love the S12.

Ultimately i suggest epoxy what you have back together in a position that wont bother you, and dont touch it, as its some 35 years old and was never designed to last until today. Classic style over design with modern production techniques that leave one in the lurch after it goes beyond its life cycle.




kelso840

I just bought a 3D printer last night. I've got plenty learning to do, but that's on the top of my list of things to try.

I'm pretty sure somebody had printed one before and posted a photo. I don't believe they shared an .stl file though, which would have been huge.
Infrequently driving an s12.

tgposkitt

Quote from: JonB on 04:26:51 AM / 30-Nov-19
Ultimately i suggest epoxy what you have back together in a position that wont bother you, and dont touch it, as its some 35 years old and was never designed to last until today. Classic style over design with modern production techniques that leave one in the lurch after it goes beyond its life cycle.

I agree, plastic welding and epoxy should be your first option. My question is: Are there ways to restore the integrity of unbroken ones?

weitrhino

There is a guy who has prototypes of the passenger vents already done and has been working on the driver side for some time, like the better part of a year. I'll check in with him again and see where things stand. He's using a complete far left vent that I sent him as a model. I chipped in heavily on Schizo's venture so this is an initiative I'm willing to support.

JonB

#9
Does a mod need to do a server space thing for files?

I have a couple of vent bits here and i could draw some odds and ends here when i find time. They may need scaled, depending on what slicer your using.  Maybe a community lastic prints section sort of thing

tgposkitt

There's a guy on Nissan S12 Parts Exchange parting out a notchback with what appears to be good vents.

seishuku

I think with the right resin, an SLA 3D printer could do the job just fine... Could even print the whole vent unit with all slats and stuff in place.
Coming up with a good 3D CAD model is the biggest problem.

I wish I had an SLA printer, I'd give it a go.
Matt W.
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