Patience55 - 30 January 2013 08:29 PM
joea64 - 30 January 2013 02:51 AM
Patience55 - 29 January 2013 08:46 PM
joea64 - 29 January 2013 08:31 AM
I asked a few months back, but the need is now urgent; I really, REALLY need to find a decent (even if basic) embalming machine/embalming pump prop for some mortuary scenes I’m planning to create in the next few days. Please reply if you know where one can be located or if you have the Hexagon/Blender skills to create such a prop reasonably quickly. I tried working in both this morning but I’m a total beginner and just don’t have the skills yet to create such a prop, even if I kept it as simple as possible.
Basically it’s a cylinder on a box.
Got this much done tonight. Could ‘possibly’ have it ready within a few days [I usually aim for the weekends]. But no textures or mats. So you’ll need a dial image and some text for the sign on the side of the base.
Will put a switch on it. Hoses, well, those are actually very easy to make in Hexagon. And you can make them exactly how long and to which curve you wish. Draw a line with the line tools. Then apply thickness. Then slap on a uvmap. Done.
edit; I put a few pics here. “Click here”
That’s further than I got with my own attempts, to be sure. Thanks! It looks like I’d need textures/mats for the metal and glass surfaces and for the cylinder to indicate the fill level of the fluid (which is usually pink-colored), and with the .obj file to play with I could add the hoses to it in Hexagon (how do I make them posable, though?). I appreciate it very much.
Not sure but I think the real ones are about 1/2 this size smaller. Do you want it smaller or like this?
According to the Wikipedia article on blood, the average adult human’s blood volume amounts to about 5 liters (some other sources say 5.5 liters), so I think that’s the approximate amount that the cylinder/tank holds. This website from a company which sells embalming machine says that the dimensions of one of their “Porti-Boy” models (which is the style you’re using) are 24 1/2 inches by 15 inches by 15 inches, with the tank being stated, in U.S. measures, as holding 3.5 gallons:
http://www.southlandmed.com/category.php?c=MarkV
So yes, shrink it down to a height about equivalent to 2 feet high (and adjust the base so that it’s proportionate to the cylinder, as in the picture in the link) and I think you’ve got it. Great work so far! (I see from the picture on that site, by the way, where the hoses/tubes should be connected, down at the lower left of the front panel. From the picture it seems there’s only the one hose that actually connects to the machine, but there’s a brass gizmo at about the halfway point, which I take to be the actual injection device, and then another hose of equivalent length running from said device through which blood is drained as the preservative is injected. Regarding textures, the body (base) is painted white so that’s no problem (just tweak it in Editor), dials are black with an analog gauge in the upper center.
EDIT: The link I posted above was for the Mark V Porti-Boy. I believe you’re actually basing your design on the Mark IV Porti-Boy, which has a somewhat smaller tank capacity (2.5 gallons):
http://www.southlandmed.com/category.php?c=MarkIV
I recognized the placement of the instruments on the front panel as being identical to the model. The Mark IV is slightly smaller than the Mark V overall, at 22 1/2” x 12 3/4” x 12 3/4”. Shouldn’t make a practical difference because overall the two models are designed nearly identically.
Also, I just realized that the trickiest part for a total Hexagon neophyte like me is probably going to be modeling that little brass doohickey on the hose (which I think is the injection gadget itself) and the metal end on the hose. It looks like I’d need to create the hose, then put the brass injection thingie in the middle, then extend the hose an equivalent length and put the metal end/nozzle at the tip of the hose. How should I do it?