The Heavy Metal guitar: The world's first 3D printed aluminium guitar! This guitar was designed to explore what metal additive manufacturing (3D printing) is capable of, and to better understand the intricacies of the whole process, from "design for additive manufacturing", to the actual printing of the guitar, to the post-processing that is required to go from a printed metal part straight off the machine to a usable masterpiece. The design of the guitar is purposefully complex to really push the limits of metal additive manufacturing.
The guitar, designed by Olaf Diegel, features a diamond tread-plate Telecaster style body, with a front and back made of barbed wire (but with the barbed wire spikes kept well away from the player) and roses inside the body. The guitar was originally nick-named War and Peace, but Heavy Metal seemed a more appropriately literal name.
The entire body was printed, as a single piece, in aluminium using an EOS M400 metal additive manufacturing system. The guitar body was printed by Xilloc in Holland. The guitar features a maple wooden inner core, a Warmoth custom neck, Seymour Duncan pickups, a Schaller bridge, and Gotoh 510 mini locking tuners.
And a special thank you goes to the team at Xilloc for the great job they did in printing the guitar body!
The guitar shown in the pictures has the following specifications:
|
Neck |
Warmoth Pro Telecaster maple neck with maple fret board, 22 frets, 25 1/2" scale, 42.86mm (1 11/16") width GraphTech White TUSQ, 6150 sized jumbo frets, 10-16" compound radius fret board, black inlay dots
|
Body |
3D printed Aluminium shot-peened to a smooth satin finish
|
Bridge |
Schaller 475, 6 String Flat Mount Bridge, Chrome
|
Pickups |
Neck: Hot-rodded Seymour Duncan Jazz SH2, Bridge: Seymour Duncan JB model SH4 |
Tuning heads |
Gotoh Mini 510 Locking Tuners, Chrome
|
Controls |
5 position Pickup select switch, 1 x Volume knob, 1 x Tone knob |
Other |
Schaller Strap Locks, D'Addario strings, low-cost hard case for safe shipping (we can, however, also offer you a high quality case as an optional extra) |
Weight |
3.7Kg |
Below are pictures of some of the details of the guitar:
The Heavy Metal Guitar Manufacturing Process.
I thought it worth describing the overall process of making this 3D printed aluminium guitar in order to give potential metal AM users a better idea of what the process involves.
The process of making the Heavy Metal guitar began with a CAD design of the instrument. This design was undertaken using Solidworks CAD software.
The CAD model was then saved in STL format, the standard file format used by most 3D printers today, and sent to Xilloc, in Holland, for printing on their EOS M400 metal additive manufacturing system.
This system is a powder-bed fusion system that works by spreading a thin (typically 30 microns thick) layer of metal powder, in this case aluminium powder, and then uses a laser to trace each particular slice of the 3D model onto the powder. Wherever the laser hits the powder, the powder gets fully melted, while the rest of the powder doesn't. The picture below shows a layer of the guitar being melted by the laser.
The process is then repeated, layer-upon-layer, until the entire guitar body has been printed.
When printing with metal, it is a welding prcess, so intense heat concentrations are present in the part wherever the laser is melting the powder, so sacrificial material (usually referred to as support material) is used as a heat-sink to transfer heat out of the part and into the base-plate that the part is essentially welded to. This prevents the part from distorting or having areas of weakness caused by heat stress concentrations. It also prevents the force from spreading of a subsequent layer of powder affecting the previously printed layer.
The above picture shows the guitar as it came out of the additive manufacturing system. The entire guitar is welded to the base plate, and the support material can clearly be seen supporting the top barbed wire strands, and all the flowers. The next step is to remove the guitar from the build plate. This can be done through wire-EDM, or with a saw as shown below.
And here is the bottom face after removal from the build platform. The entire bottom surface is covered with support material that will need to be removed:
And then begins the toughest part of the entire project: Removing all the support material. With relatively simple geometries, this could be done on a CNC machine. But on a complex geometry, such as this guitar, the only way is to remove it all by hand, which can be a very time-consuming operation.
For me, this was my first hands-on experience in removing support material from a metal AM part. In total, it probably took me a total of about 4 days to remove all the support material. Now that I have developed certain techniques, and a better understanding of the support material, I could probably cut the time in half if I had to do it again.
Here's what the guitar looked like after support material removal. The support materials in the flat area where the pickups and the controls go were milled flat, but the rest of the material was removed by hand:
Then began the arduous task of improving the surface finish. Straight off the AM system, the surface finish could best be described to one similar to a sand-cast part. To my mind, the best way of thinking of current metal AM technologies is in exactly the same way one thinks of sand-casting. If, for example, we sand-cast an engine block, all the surfaces that require good surface finishes will need to be machined in a post-processing operation. IE: the cylinders will need to be bored out, the head-gasket area will need to be skimmed, anywhere where bearings or gaskets are going to fit will need to be machined, etc. If one thinks of metal AM in the same way, one will never be disappointed.
The objective of this step was to achieve a much smoother finish that was more comfortable to touch and hold. This was, again, a very slow process that involved a lot of filing and sanding, and finally bead-blasting the guitar to a soft satin finish. This step also took about 3 to 4 days, mainly because of the complex geometry of the guitar.
And here are 3 pictures contrasting the surface finish of the guitar straight of the printer, after post-processing, and the finished surface finish:
Straight off the machine:
After first round of clean-up:
:
And after shot-peening with glass beads
Once all the body post-processing was finished, it only takes about a day to CNC machine the wooden inner core, get everything else assembled, wired up, set the action, etc.
And, voila, a 3D printed aluminium guitar! |