Yeap, the inside of my Time Omni body is rough enough to catch the q-tips cotton and is a bitch to clean! Could I smooth it out myself or should I bring it over for a coffee and polish?Yes,quite normal.
Each custom mouthpiece needs about 90 minutes to be machined from a Ti rod piece,with my current equipment ( low power mini-lathe with no lubricant-cooling system ) .
I've to go slow to avoid overheating of the titanium piece,
which will lead to Ti surface galling and cutting tool failures.
Then it takes about 45 to 60 minutes to polish the mp inside and out .
So,every mp needs more than two hours to be finished.
I'm pretty sure DV has the equipment to fabricate mouthpieces at a fraction of time I need to make them.
But then ,polishing ...
Several techniques can be used to clean and smoothen the titanium substrate surface,
namely chemical, mechanical and thermal polishing.Chemical polishing requires HF-containing acid solutions and it does not provide as smooth a surface as the other methods;mechanical polishing can provide a very smooth and flat surface topography, but it is work-intensive and time consuming, furthermore, polishing media can become embedded in the surface.
Thermal polishing requires heat-treatment in a high vacuum and specimens must be very clean to start with.Compared to the other polishing processes, electropolishing is an effective method to clean, smoothen and polish, the titanium surface. It removes impurities from the metal surface and gives the surface a high luster.
https://www.electrochem.org/dl/ma/201/pdfs/0384.pdf
Still electropolishing uses kinda dangerous (explosive or Fluorine-containing ) electrolyte solutions ...
https://www.jim.or.jp/journal/e/pdf3/52/11/2061.pdf
...and it needs special equipment and skills ,of course.
The easy and affordable way is mechanical polishing .But is time-consuming.
For DV to polish each of the Ti piece they fabricate is rather counterproductive.
It is not an easy "issue" to solve efficiently-without a profound impact
at the production rate .
And while non-polished Ti parts can be an aesthetic issue for some ,
is not an operational one for anyone.
Cheers.
Mass producing stems is not something of my future plans.SDS, you need new equipment I guess?
Yeap, the inside of my Time Omni body is rough enough to catch the q-tips cotton and is a bitch to clean! Could I smooth it out myself or should I bring it over for a coffee and polish?
Oh my!!! That's precious!
Oh my!!! That's precious!
Wear respiratory protections when working with CF, the dust is as nasty if not more than glass. But do you intend to use the CF in contact with the vapor and/or the user lips? Woven sheets are full of glue and I'm unsure I would trust this material to be close to my vapor.
We've something in common .Hmm, to be honest gold doesn't appeal to me, I'm really not much into bling, although I'm not sure what the colored gold might look like and it's possible I might like that.
What about stone or crystals? There's some really beautiful ones out there at very low prices, I've seen so much cheap tacky crap in gift shops made out of awesome materials that would be much much better off as a vapcap body.
Edit:- Just remembered these as another suggestion, glass vapour path enclosed in metal:
I remember watching a documentary a few years back (I am pretty sure it was called “Big History”),in which they discuss why humans have long had a fascination/love for gold and other blingy things.Yep, there are a lot guys who like bling-bling.
I remember watching a documentary a few years back (I am pretty sure it was called “Big History”),in which they discuss why humans have long had a fascination/love for gold and other blingy things.
In the documentary it proposes that it stems from surviving during the early nomad years. Our brain was keen on spotting any sparkly reflections in the distance, which might be a water source.
So, basically, liking blingy things is just a left over gene from the early days of human life survival.
Just thought I’d throw that out there for fun!
I could see the little rings for the mouthpiece being sold as extras with different textures and anodizing. For real.
I don't recall seeing your knurling anodized...I'll bet it looks wicked cool.
That purple is gorgeous...I can't decide if the green or purple is the best. Those color shifting ones were wicked, too. Like different layers of anodizing? Anyway, I love seeing how your work progresses.
Nice idea which would have a lot of fans I guess. It's a higher sophisticated grade of legoing. Just lego your mp as you like it and change design of the whole device with ease. Could imagine for myself to give that mp with anodized rings as a little colour accent a try although I'm not so much in colours of anodized ti.
SDS, I'm pretty sure this mp will become a best seller.