- November 3rd, 2016, 12:22 am#4885162
My GB costume felt like there was missing something, and with only a couple weeks till Halloween, I needed something I could build quickly, so I decided to make some (GB1) Ecto Goggles!
Shopping List-
From Ebay:
PVS5 Facemask
1.25” Extended Sleeve+ T-Mount+ T2 Ring (right side eye piece)
2x Barlow Lens for 1.25" Telescope Eyepiece (left side eye piece)
Andoer T/T2 Telephoto Mirror Lens Mount (for attaching the Barlow Lens)
From Amazon/Hardware Store:
Tamiya TS-28 Olive Drab Spray Lacquer
Moore D ring hangers, No. 143-DLS
3/4" Black Nylon Webbing + 3X Sliders
Heavy Duty Snaps - SZ 24 - 5/8 in
1/8" thick styrene
Assorted fasteners and knobs
E6000 Glue, Clear
Easy Off Oven Cleaner
From GB Fans:
GB Fans Stickers
Total cost ~$100
The frames arrived before the lenses, so the first thing I made was the straps.
Heat screwdriver, stick it through the webbing to create a hole:
Two piece snap, and snap tools:
Use the snap tool and a hammer to flare the little tube on the inside of the snap:
It works!
Complete strap
Test fit of D ring:
Next step was to scratch build a plate to cover the massive hole in the front of the goggle frames:
Tapping threads into tabs for mounting the side knobs:
Big holes have small beginnings:
Unfortunately, the T-adapter comes completely anodized in black. Fortunately, the T-adapter can be disassembled, and anodizing can be removed. After a little research, I found that Easy-Off Oven Cleaner can be used to remove anodizing due to its lye content. Having disassembled the T-adapter, I sprayed oven cleaner on the smaller diameter portion. A few seconds later, the anodizing started to come off. I had to rinse the part and respray it a couple times, but with some light scrubbing with a brass brush, all the anodizing came off. Also, everyone keeps telling me that oven cleaner is really dangerous, so wear your PPEs!
Finished lens:
I cut a disc of diffuser from an old LCD tv screen, and put it in the T-adapter (the T-adapter doesn't come with a lens). I also experimented with lighting the optics with some green LEDs, but decided to scrap that idea in favor of screen accuracy.
I painted the goggles olive drab, and began the final assembly:
The T2 rings are glued in place with clear E6000, and the optics screw into the T2 rings (M45 thread):
The extra holes are plugged with counter sunk socket head cap screws. Weather striping is added to the back of the frames. Knobs are installed.
Stickers are added, paint is lightly weathered, and voila! Ecto Goggles!
Shopping List-
From Ebay:
PVS5 Facemask
1.25” Extended Sleeve+ T-Mount+ T2 Ring (right side eye piece)
2x Barlow Lens for 1.25" Telescope Eyepiece (left side eye piece)
Andoer T/T2 Telephoto Mirror Lens Mount (for attaching the Barlow Lens)
From Amazon/Hardware Store:
Tamiya TS-28 Olive Drab Spray Lacquer
Moore D ring hangers, No. 143-DLS
3/4" Black Nylon Webbing + 3X Sliders
Heavy Duty Snaps - SZ 24 - 5/8 in
1/8" thick styrene
Assorted fasteners and knobs
E6000 Glue, Clear
Easy Off Oven Cleaner
From GB Fans:
GB Fans Stickers
Total cost ~$100
The frames arrived before the lenses, so the first thing I made was the straps.
Heat screwdriver, stick it through the webbing to create a hole:
Two piece snap, and snap tools:
Use the snap tool and a hammer to flare the little tube on the inside of the snap:
It works!
Complete strap
Test fit of D ring:
Next step was to scratch build a plate to cover the massive hole in the front of the goggle frames:
Tapping threads into tabs for mounting the side knobs:
Big holes have small beginnings:
Unfortunately, the T-adapter comes completely anodized in black. Fortunately, the T-adapter can be disassembled, and anodizing can be removed. After a little research, I found that Easy-Off Oven Cleaner can be used to remove anodizing due to its lye content. Having disassembled the T-adapter, I sprayed oven cleaner on the smaller diameter portion. A few seconds later, the anodizing started to come off. I had to rinse the part and respray it a couple times, but with some light scrubbing with a brass brush, all the anodizing came off. Also, everyone keeps telling me that oven cleaner is really dangerous, so wear your PPEs!
Finished lens:
I cut a disc of diffuser from an old LCD tv screen, and put it in the T-adapter (the T-adapter doesn't come with a lens). I also experimented with lighting the optics with some green LEDs, but decided to scrap that idea in favor of screen accuracy.
I painted the goggles olive drab, and began the final assembly:
The T2 rings are glued in place with clear E6000, and the optics screw into the T2 rings (M45 thread):
The extra holes are plugged with counter sunk socket head cap screws. Weather striping is added to the back of the frames. Knobs are installed.
Stickers are added, paint is lightly weathered, and voila! Ecto Goggles!
Last edited by Conqueror_Worm on August 20th, 2017, 11:27 am, edited 1 time in total.
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