these series of videos deserve way more views. i'm going to try this with an n64 controller and see if i have similar results. thank you for making these ur work is absolutely amazing
This is the best tutorial I've found for this sort of thing. I'll be sure to use these techniques when I want to make some custom SNES buttons and shells.
Hey dude, I love the video. I have been looking to make custom buttons myself but sadly there are so many tools that I don't own so I'll leave the custom buttons for u
@@Wodpuncher001 Haven't been able to--work related obligations came up and I couldn't dedicate the time to it. Spinning the project back up! Been collecting a bunch of aluminum cans for when I did!
What is the strength like on these shells? Would they break easily if you were tossing them in a backpack or hastily cleaning up and dropping them to the floor etc.
They’re a little bit more rigid than an OEM shell which is made of ABS. When it’s screwed together I’d say it’s just as strong, but as separate pieces you could definitely snap them in half because of the added rigidity
Awesome! This worked out pretty well for my first time :) Do you have any tips for coloring the letters to separate them from the main button? Maybe even some tips for doing some custom designs on the Controller shell? I have no idea. Appreciate any help :) take care & stay healthy
Have you ever made copies of the silicone pads that go under the buttons? I'm trying to repair a rare generic OG XBOX controller that is missing the pad that goes under the back button, but it is a different part than the name brand one. Cool video! Thanks!
I would assume you can it would just take much bigger boxes, molds and a lot more resin. I plan on doing this too, I don't see why it wouldn't work. Maybe, if you have a limitation on the size of your pressure pot or something like that.