Specialist Arms Forum
Specialist Games General Discussion => General Discussion => Topic started by: Meraklis on September 09, 2016, 12:29:00 PM
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Recently I discovered Onslaught miniatures. Although his focus is on 6mm and Epic I was impressed by the quality and detail despite the small size.
It appears that he designs the figures on some kind of Software (Rhinoceros?) and then 3D prints and copies it?
Does anyone know what is the process for this approach?
Is it possible to do it in 10mm? How come no one has done it?
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He's a professional 3D-modeller so perhaps the skill set isn't too common among hobbyists?
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hehehe of course.
I am just wondering how come nobody approached a 3D modeller to do the same thing for 10mm.
Is it that expensive ?
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it's not cheap. trust me
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3D printing has been touted for several years now as a "disruptive" technology, especially for things like wargaming, but it is still a new technology with shortcomings.
Print on demand is actually quite expensive and the cost hasn't really come down.
The fan sculpts that I see are based on very high quality 3D prints that are then cast in metal, but I believe those prints are very expensive and I do not know where they come from.
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Presumably industrial prototyping = very costly.
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The Abomination Ogres were definitely CAD ones that were then cast, but I can't think of any currently available Warhammer proxies that were 3D printed to begin with.
It is 100% something I am interested in. I do occasionally sketch on paper evil dwarf or glade elf concepts I would love to see done as a proxy range.
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For those who are interested, the people in charge of Onslaught and some other 6 mm manufactures post quite regularly on the Tactical Command boards:
http://www.tacticalwargames.net/taccmd/viewforum.php?f=138&sid=1f070e9e9c73ddee396d739cda952238 (http://www.tacticalwargames.net/taccmd/viewforum.php?f=138&sid=1f070e9e9c73ddee396d739cda952238)
Maybe asking them directly how the process works could be informative?
Thinking Stone