Oh man, that helmet looks fantastic with the visor and weathering – you can really be proud of that!


A 3D body scan is something I hadn’t even thought about, but it could work really well. Personally, I just used Armorsmith and, with my wife’s help, entered all the necessary measurements to get the scaling right.
~ Bargo
 
Oh man, that helmet looks fantastic with the visor and weathering – you can really be proud of that!


A 3D body scan is something I hadn’t even thought about, but it could work really well. Personally, I just used Armorsmith and, with my wife’s help, entered all the necessary measurements to get the scaling right.
~ Bargo
Why thank you!! I appreciate it!

I think I may nab Armorsmith as well as using Blender just to make sure there aren’t specific clipping issues that I otherwise may be unable to see in just Blender. I also pondered just doing measurements for a while, but thankfully the place with a scanner isn’t too far from my house, and while there’s a fee it’s rather reasonable for something that will help me greatly on exact scaling.
 
The visor really does bring the helmet to life! I think you did a good job covering over the holes with weathering. It looks like a properly well worn helmet. I enjoyed reading through this whole thread this morning!
 
The visor really does bring the helmet to life! I think you did a good job covering over the holes with weathering. It looks like a properly well worn helmet. I enjoyed reading through this whole thread this morning!
Thank you! I’m glad that the weathering looks decent, I’m still not fully sold with the hole, but I think it works well to make it seem more ‘lived in’ or well worn like you said.

Glad you enjoyed reading my thread! It’s been a lot of fun updating it and creating something that I can look back on, so I’m glad others are enjoying it too.
 
Today is a very fun update, and a big one to boot!! I've made a fair bit of progress and I'm excited to update y'all about it.

So first and foremost, waiting for the weather to dry enough so that I could clear coat sucked. I waited about a week and a half for the humidity to get anywhere near below 60%-70%, which is what the spray can required. Thankfully, after waiting forever, the clear coat went on and looked great right away. It did kind of darken the color further but nonetheless, it looks good. I'll show some photos further down as I didn't take any specific photos of the clear coat since it was fairly dark by the time I finished it.

While I had been waiting for that week and a half, I got started on a render of my Spartan and my planned colors (Shout out Jeffw773 and their Spartan Blender Render tutorial, which I'll link at the end of my post) so that I could be fully prepared come painting time for my armor. Here's what I'm currently planning on:

renderfront.png
renderback.png
MKVIISpartanRenderright1.0.png


Since the purple was such a pain to use, I decided to use it as a highlight color instead of the main color, and I think it still will work pretty well. I think all together it really looks pretty dope! Not quite a proper 'canon' color combo, but cool nonetheless.

Now that the render was done, the clear coat had cured, and I had tweaked my scaling again (more on that later), it was time to work on visor, electronics, and padding installation! Now at first for the padding I was trying to use a generic helmet padding insert thing, but it really wasn't working well. It wasn't super comfortable, and any time I moved even a little bit I was like a bobble head. Not good. So I bought a non-toxic, etc etc, egg crate mattress topper, and began to cut out pieces to line my helmet. With some decent planning, a sharpie, the sticky velcro dots that came with the original helmet padding, some random velcro I found in my house, and a boatload of hot glue, I set out to installing everything.

I focused on the visor first, as I needed to see the dimensions of how it would sit inside the helmet to figure out padding, wiring, etc. To install the visor I decided to use hot glue. Now, it's definitely not the best way to go for removability, but I hadn't preplanned any Chicago screws or anything, so I just went with what I had. After heating up some hot glue and placing a few beads around the front, I gently pressed the visor into place, doing my best to line everything up and keep it flush with as many parts of the front as I could. I then put some securing bits of hot glue on the sides, and voila, it was installed! (Photos below)

After that was done, worked out the electronics, namely the two 40mm Noctua fans that I put in the front-most vents. With some delicate hot glue work, they attached smoothly and sat flush with the interior area of the vents, and they pull in a pretty good amount of air. I'm very pleased with how they turned out, and they de-fog my visor incredibly well even without any air deflectors, etc. (I had originally printed a mini air deflector, but it was just tall enough that I couldn't get my head into the helmet with it attached). They are very necessary, as I run warm and without the fans on, the helmet heats up immediately. After those were glued, I ran the wires to the back of the helmet where I then glued down the on/off switch that controls the fans, then ran the USB wire out the back of the helmet. I plan to hide the cable in my neck seal, and have the battery pack attached to the interior of the back plate, as the battery I bought is too big to go into my helmet.

With all of that wiring done and delicately glued down, it was padding time. After measuring out some pieces of the egg crate foam I began to place them into the helmet to create a nice comfortable interior that would hold my head securely without being too tight. This was the final result:

interior straight on.jpg
interiorside.jpg
interiorfront.jpg


It may seem like a ton of padding, but it's necessary as I had to make my helmet a bit big so that I could get my head through the neck hole, so it bobbled pretty freely without the padding. I placed padding at the back of my head, along my jaw, at my cheeks, and at my chin. This continuous pressure all around my head means that even though the helmet is a smidgen big, and a bit heavy, it's pretty comfortable to wear and doesn't bobble. I also used part of the generic padding as I needed something comfortable for the top of my head that wouldn't have my head sticking too far out of the bottom of my helmet. With egg crate padding on the top, my chin was almost all the way out of the bottom of the helmet, so I decided against doing that.

I also made sure that all of the foam is removable. Each piece has a strip of velcro hot glued onto it so that it can attach to the round velcro tabs on the interior, so that it can be removed for cleaning. I'm naturally a pretty sweaty person, so being able to clean and disinfect the interior of my helmet was incredibly important to me.

My current only issue with the padding is the chin. It's too close to the fans for my taste, but it needs to stick out like that to assist with holding my head in place. I'm going to continue brainstorming this issue to figure out how I could mitigate the amount of foam I'm using for better airflow, while keeping my head secure.

The only other thing that this helmet needs is the microphone for my voice amplifier. I'll be purchasing one a little closer to the end of my project so that I can be heard through my helmet, so I preplanned a little spot where I can velcro in the mic (again, focusing on an emphasis of removability with just about everything). I plan to use a wireless mic, so being able to take it out to charge or swap batteries is a must.

With all that together, I officially declare my helmet done! While I inevitably will tweak some things, and add some things, for now I'd say it's complete. Here it is in all it's glory:

compelete1.jpg
complete2.jpg
donepoint.jpg


It really was a ton of fun for me to build this helmet, and I'm very pleased with the results. I'm very eager to get working on the rest now, which I am glad to say that I'm making progress on!! I worked quite a bit on the scaling of my suit, with assistance from KaeSpoon and Fallen for advice on how to scale pieces for my body type, and I think I've now got it to where I want it. I plan to start my first few tests tonight, so expect more posts from me soon!

Hope you enjoyed this Chonky update, and I'll see you soon with more stuff!

Arcane signing off.

Spartan Blender Render Tutorial: [Tutorial] How to make/view/export your own Halo Spartans in Blender
 
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Ah I almost forgot! I wanted to give a cost breakdown for what I've currently purchased for this project. Not all of these items are for the helmet, some are general craft supplies or for the rest of my armor, but I'm including them as this is a breakdown of the project costs as a whole.

CA Glue: $15.68Filler Primer x2: $15.94Switch Cable: $9.99Compression Leggings: $24.99Egg Crate foam: $25.99
Duplicolor Purple Spray Paint x2: $31.5416oz Bondo Spot Putty: $16.42Battery pack: $9.99Polymaker TPU 95A: $29.99MKVII Helmet 3D Print Files: $24.30
Paper Cups: $14.87Branfuhr Studios MKVII Visor: $103Noctua 40mm Fans: $31.90Shoe Toe inserts for loose shoes: $9.99MKVII Full Armor & Under Suit 3D Print Files: $48.75
Gloves: $19.99Helmet Padding: $23.98Tallmenshoes Lifted Boots: $65Balaclava: $15.99Agathius Shoulder pad 3D print File: $6.75
Sanding Sticks: $14.10Matte Clear Coat: $16.38Compression Shirt: $24.99Extension cable for battery pack: $9.99
Matte Black Spray Paint: $8.59Satin Bronze Spray Paint: $13.99Gold Spray Paint: $10.99Hot Glue Sticks: $5.59Total: $766.53

While the total may seem high for just my helmet, do note that a fair bit of this stuff, like I said, will be used for my armor as well (glue, cups, gloves, sanding sticks, primer, padding, clear coat, shoes, compression clothes, TPU, etc. I also will mention that there's no other 3D Printer Filament listed, and that is because so far I have only used filament that I already had, the only filament I've purchased for this project is the TPU, and my cost breakdown is going to primarily include the things I bought for this project in specific, so I'm not counting the pre-purchased filament, sandpaper, etc.

If anyone has any questions on my process and/or my cost breakdown, chuck em below! Would love to chat more about everything.

Arcane signing off.
 
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This isn’t quite a full update, but I wanted to celebrate the fact that this is my 50th message! One step closer to becoming a full member!! My 90 days is at the end of this month, so it’s very close!

And so this isn’t a useless post, here’s a very tiny update:

I’ve started printing my armor!! The 3rd of three parts of my left thigh finished printing this morning, so I’m going to finish cleaning those pieces tonight and try it on. I chose to start with the thigh as that’s the only piece I wasn’t entirely sure on for my scaling, so here’s hoping when it’s all together that it fits properly.

Quick photo of two of the pieces:

IMG_7508.jpeg


From what I can tell it should fit, but I’m worried it’s a little tall? We’ll see. It'll be a combo of colors once I have it on as I’m trying to work through all the filament I currently own before I order more.

Anyways, will update again once I’ve got more progress on printing the whole suit!

Arcane signing off.
 
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Looks great dude!

I felt the same way with a liquid chrome marker and silver rub n buff for the scrapes at first. once I got a matte clearcoat on the pieces and took the "6ft rule" in mind, it changed the way I thought about weathering and how much silver was needed to make it look good at a distance.

I really dig the plasma burn and it makes me want to incorporate that somewhere now haha!
 
Looks great dude!

I felt the same way with a liquid chrome marker and silver rub n buff for the scrapes at first. once I got a matte clearcoat on the pieces and took the "6ft rule" in mind, it changed the way I thought about weathering and how much silver was needed to make it look good at a distance.

I really dig the plasma burn and it makes me want to incorporate that somewhere now haha!

Thanks!! I definitely feel the same when it comes to using a matte clear coat and the 6ft rule, it’s definitely a lot better looking when you consider those things. I’m going to use the same methods on the rest of my armor since they turned out well, but I’m going to try a few other methods as well.

Thanks!! It was very impromptu but I’m glad it turned out well. It’s very easy to over do burn marks though, so I’d recommend being careful with where you put it and how much blackening you add.
 
This isn’t quite a full update, but I wanted to celebrate the fact that this is my 50th message! One step closer to becoming a full member!! My 90 days is at the end of this month, so it’s very close!

And so this isn’t a useless post, here’s a very tiny update:

I’ve started printing my armor!! The 3rd of three parts of my left thigh finished printing this morning, so I’m going to finish cleaning those pieces tonight and try it on. I chose to start with the thigh as that’s the only piece I wasn’t entirely sure on for my scaling, so here’s hoping when it’s all together that it fits properly.

Quick photo of two of the pieces:

View attachment 367680

From what I can tell it should fit, but I’m worried it’s a little tall? We’ll see. It'll be a combo of colors once I have it on as I’m trying to work through all the filament I currently own before I order more.

Anyways, will update again once I’ve got more progress on printing the whole suit!

Arcane signing off.
Congrats on 50! I’ve noticed if it doesn’t hit your cod it can be a little tall. Especially if you do a soft inner thigh because you can make that a little low to accommodate. Good luck with that though
 
Congrats on 50! I’ve noticed if it doesn’t hit your cod it can be a little tall. Especially if you do a soft inner thigh because you can make that a little low to accommodate. Good luck with that though
I'm currently planning to do a TPU inner thigh, so we'll see how that goes! Just finished gluing together the thigh, just waiting for the glue to fully dry before I try it on.
 
Hey everyone! I've got a bit of a mid sized update for y'all today, but before I start with that I want to mention that I've started working on the rest of my armor, so my future updates are going to be a little slower going forward so that I'm not dumping tiny posts about the same 3 steps but on different armor pieces lol.

Anyways, update time!

So while I waited for the first part of my armor to print, I decided to go ahead and bite the bullet (hah) and make myself a weapon! I picked Galactic Armory's MK50 Infinite Sidekick file as I loved that it has functioning parts, and got it printed, prepped, then painted! I'm honestly really happy and the only thing I need to tweak is that the mag falls out really easy because my magnet isn't strong enough. Here's a video of the completed Sidekick!



I'm honestly really pleased with it, and it'll be nice to have a prop to go with my full armor.

After that was completed, I threw myself full into the throes of working on printing all my armor. I'm starting with the arms and working my way down (random, I know, but it was the parts that I had pre-prepped for printing). Here's a test fit I did for the forearms:



They fit great, and I promptly churned out the hand plates, biceps, and bicep attachments as well.

bicep.jpg
battach.jpg
forearms.jpg
sprayed.jpg


So all of my currently printed pieces have been sanded, bondo-ed, and coated in a healthy layer of filler primer. Next steps will to be wet sanding everything, then paint!

As for the rest of the pieces, I'm currently working on getting all of the chest armor printed, so it'll be a few days until I have anything new to sand, bondo, prime, etc, so it's a good time to work on painting.

I also completely cleared out and cleaned my garage today, and reconfigured my workshop area, so it's even tidier now and I'm incredibly happy about it. Having everything organized and clean should hopefully help my workflow.

More updates coming soon, so I'll see y'all then.

Arcane signing off.
 

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Ah I almost forgot! I wanted to give a cost breakdown for what I've currently purchased for this project. Not all of these items are for the helmet, some are general craft supplies or for the rest of my armor, but I'm including them as this is a breakdown of the project costs as a whole.

CA Glue: $15.68Filler Primer x2: $15.94Switch Cable: $9.99Compression Leggings: $24.99Egg Crate foam: $25.99
Duplicolor Purple Spray Paint x2: $31.5416oz Bondo Spot Putty: $16.42Battery pack: $9.99Polymaker TPU 95A: $29.99MKVII Helmet 3D Print Files: $24.30
Paper Cups: $14.87Branfuhr Studios MKVII Visor: $103Noctua 40mm Fans: $31.90Shoe Toe inserts for loose shoes: $9.99MKVII Full Armor & Under Suit 3D Print Files: $48.75
Gloves: $19.99Helmet Padding: $23.98Tallmenshoes Lifted Boots: $65Balaclava: $15.99Agathius Shoulder pad 3D print File: $6.75
Sanding Sticks: $14.10Matte Clear Coat: $16.38Compression Shirt: $24.99Extension cable for battery pack: $9.99
Matte Black Spray Paint: $8.59Satin Bronze Spray Paint: $13.99Gold Spray Paint: $10.99Hot Glue Sticks: $5.59Total: $766.53

While the total may seem high for just my helmet, do note that a fair bit of this stuff, like I said, will be used for my armor as well (glue, cups, gloves, sanding sticks, primer, padding, clear coat, shoes, compression clothes, TPU, etc. I also will mention that there's no other 3D Printer Filament listed, and that is because so far I have only used filament that I already had, the only filament I've purchased for this project is the TPU, and my cost breakdown is going to primarily include the things I bought for this project in specific, so I'm not counting the pre-purchased filament, sandpaper, etc.

If anyone has any questions on my process and/or my cost breakdown, chuck em below! Would love to chat more about everything.

Arcane signing off.
It's interesting to see a cost breakdown like this. I need to do the same for one of my suits eventually
 
That visor 100% works and looks fantastic. I need to get a vacuum forming set up cuz now I want to get that quality
It’s an awesome visor. I got it from Branfuhr Studios (they’ve got a website and all their socials are under that name) and it’s outstanding quality. I’d highly recommend it if you don’t make your own vac setup. I don’t really have a way to make a vac setup myself, so it was a great way to get a visor.

Only note is to make sure that the visor will fit into your helmet, he makes one size only and if your helmet is much larger or much smaller, it may not fit. He lists the measurements on his site, so you can check before ordering (which is important as iirc, he doesn’t do refunds)
 
It’s an awesome visor. I got it from Branfuhr Studios (they’ve got a website and all their socials are under that name) and it’s outstanding quality. I’d highly recommend it if you don’t make your own vac setup. I don’t really have a way to make a vac setup myself, so it was a great way to get a visor.

Only note is to make sure that the visor will fit into your helmet, he makes one size only and if your helmet is much larger or much smaller, it may not fit. He lists the measurements on his site, so you can check before ordering (which is important as iirc, he doesn’t do refunds)
Yeah I had to scale my helmet and I made a Volant helmet
 
Hey everyone! I’ve got a medium update for y’all today. [Brief disclaimer: I’m making this post on my phone so the formatting may be off, and I’m light on photos unfortunately because I keep forgetting to take progress shots]

Since I last updated I’ve completed printing all of my chest armor, started the paint work on my forearms, biceps, and hand plates, glued all the chest armor together, and started working on my boots.

I’m currently crunching to get my boots done before Halloween as I’m going to be going as a ‘casual’ Spartan by wearing my helmet, gloves, and boots along with either my workshop coveralls or a tech wear outfit, haven’t decided yet. It’s been a hectic last few days trying to print everything and process it, but in theory I’ll be able to get it done by Friday.

So, current progress! I’ll start with the arm painting. I’ve started with the purple sections on the forearms and one shoulder piece as the paint I’m using is incredibly finicky (and continues to be), but once it’s cured it’s pretty strong and won’t come up when taped. I hope to finish the painting for the arms next week! I also started working on the gold for the biceps as there’s no purple on those. Unfortunately my sanding revealed a fairly annoying print failure for one of the shoulders, so I’ve had to reprint a new one and I’ve not been able to get to finishing processing it yet. Otherwise for painting, my hand plates are almost done! I just need to paint the back of them black, then glue it onto my gloves and those are all done in time for Halloween.

IMG_7753.jpeg


After I’d done all that painting, I started working on the chest armor. I went through a few options of gluing methods, but eventually with help from Jabronie (AVKamfher) in the discord, I decided on using PVC Cement. Now, this stuff is awesome for gluing PETG pieces together but if you decide to use it PLEASE read safety information on it, and you MUST wear a respirator and good gloves. PVC Cement is incredibly toxic, so you need to be careful.

With that disclaimer out of the way, the PVC Cement has really turned out great. Unfortunately it was incredibly messy to use, and cured really slow for me due to the temperature the day I applied it, but now that it’s cured for a few days it’s incredibly solid and sturdy. I highly recommend that anyone using it either uses clamps to hold your pieces together for the requisite 15+ minute curing/sticking time, or gather your patience to sit there and hold the pieces. My clamps unfortunately didn’t really help for gluing the chest, so I did a lot of sitting and absently holding stuff together while waiting on a 15 minute timer.

Another tip for PVC Cement, buy a two pack of the primer + cement. The primer is very important, and assists with adhesion, which you want to be as strong as possible. I’d definitely recommend using PVC Cement to anyone that is okay with working with toxic materials, has a respirator and a proper pair of gloves, and has the patience to read the safety information and work with it. If you are lacking any of those things, please find an alternate solution, the fumes and such are not something to mess with.

After the cement cured, I began removing the excess cement using a craft knife for the largest stuff, and 220 Grit sandpaper for everything else. Afterwards I applied a healthy layer of bondo along the layer lines, joint lines, and any other imperfections

IMG_7756.jpeg


I’ll include better photos in my next update, as my focus wasn’t really on the upper body armor, I was mainly working on it between working on my boot pieces.

Speaking of which, the boots were my biggest focus this week. I needed to print, process, and install the pieces of boot armor, and paint my boots black, as I purchased them on a clearance sale and the only option was grey. I’ve since completed printing and partial post processing for the armor, and I’ve completed painting the boots themselves. The boot armor is simple, and I’m following the same sanding then bondo+acetone then filler primer method that I’ve done with every other part thus far. My only issue is that I needed to reprint one of the toe caps, as I’d scaled it poorly when I edited the blender model to fit to my shoes in particular. That finished printing this morning, so I’ll be processing it tonight.

IMG_7754.jpeg


Now for, in my opinion, a fascinating test. So, my boots are from tallmenshoes (Shoutout N8TEBB for recommending the shoes in his build thread). They were running a great clearance sale where the boots were over 50% off, but the downside was that they were grey, when I wanted a black boot to match my color scheme. So I decided to do a fascinating test and use Plastidip to paint the shoe. Why Plastidip? Well, it’s commonly used on foam builds as it can flex a little, etc, and I like the slightly rubberized look that it gives things. Thus, with boots needing a flexible paint and me wanting a rubberized texture, I ruled out staining, dyeing, etc, and went with Plastidip. I sprayed them last night and honestly they were looking pretty cool as it dried, and exactly how I wanted them to look. I’ll be interested to see how they look once they’ve properly cured tonight, and it’ll be interesting to see the longevity/if there is any cracking when I wear them on Halloween, but here’s hoping they stay strong!!

IMG_7757.jpeg
Here they are painted
IMG_7390.jpeg
vs before paint.

So I’m really hoping that turns out well.

That’s about all I have for updates, but expect another update this weekend after Halloween, as I plan to take a few photos of what I end up wearing on Friday, and then I hope to also have photos of more finished pieces.

I creep ever closer to completing my build and it’s been brilliant thus far, I’m truly loving working on this project and I’m so grateful for the 405th community and everyone’s encouragement and help whenever I have one of my endless questions. So thank YOU, all of you, for your help, welcome, and friendliness. I can’t wait to have my full build complete and able to wear it to cons with the 405th.

Oh and also I’m getting ever closer to full membership! Only a few more days now and I can be reviewed for membership (I promise my posts are constructive and contributive lol!)

Arcane signing off.
 

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