Bose QC35 Headphone Holder - One Piece
thingiverse
Does the world really need another headphone holder, desk clip, thing? Apparently, yes. I own the Bose QC35 noise-canceling headphones. They're pretty and soft, and they work great. But whenever I'd use any of the multitude of headphone clips on Thingiverse, they were all about 25mm wide, which looks great but works poorly for more-comfortable headphones with headbands that hard plastic won't leave an impression on. These Bose headphones have a soft headband cushion in the top, which is pliable and impressionable, and they clearly need more surface area to avoid a weird, ugly, 25mm divot in the center of your fancy gear. So I fired up Fusion 360, grabbed my shelf-clip bracket (which fits great on my 25mm thick desk/hutch top), and created a new project: the one-piece Bose QC35 Headphone Holder. I fiddled with geometry and fillets to get things to look nice and fit the headphones well. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well, but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work, so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model. Same exact geometry as this fella but with a slide-mechanism kinda like a camera hotshoe that holds everything together and gravity should keep it snug. This version is one piece, so four hours and a heck of a lot of support structure later, you've got this thing that will safely hang your Bose QC35 headphones without "pinching" the soft headband layer. If you love wasting time and filament on support structures, sanding, and finishing, this is the version for you! (Masochist!) If you want something easier, you'll want to wait for the two-piece model. Trust me, it'll be just as awesome, waste less time and plastic, and it'll have this cool slidy thing! To quote Gob from Arrested Development: "I've made a huge mistake." I designed this headphone hook with awesomeness in mind but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. It's like 4 hours versus 2 hours, and maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. I created a new project: the one-piece Bose QC35 Headphone Holder. I fiddled with geometry and fillets to get things to look nice and fit the headphones well. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. This version is one piece, so four hours and a heck of a lot of support structure later, you've got this thing that will safely hang your Bose QC35 headphones without "pinching" the soft headband layer. If you love wasting time and filament on support structures, sanding, and finishing, this is the version for you! (Masochist!) If you want something easier, you'll want to wait for the two-piece model. Trust me, it'll be just as awesome, waste less time and plastic, and it'll have this cool slidy thing! I designed this headphone hook with awesomeness in mind but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. It's like 4 hours versus 2 hours, and maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. To quote Gob from Arrested Development: "I've made a huge mistake." I designed this headphone hook with awesomeness in mind but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. It's like 4 hours versus 2 hours, and maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. I created a new project: the one-piece Bose QC35 Headphone Holder. I fiddled with geometry and fillets to get things to look nice and fit the headphones well. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. This version is one piece, so four hours and a heck of a lot of support structure later, you've got this thing that will safely hang your Bose QC35 headphones without "pinching" the soft headband layer. If you love wasting time and filament on support structures, sanding, and finishing, this is the version for you! (Masochist!) If you want something easier, you'll want to wait for the two-piece model. Trust me, it'll be just as awesome, waste less time and plastic, and it'll have this cool slidy thing! I created a new project: the one-piece Bose QC35 Headphone Holder. I fiddled with geometry and fillets to get things to look nice and fit the headphones well. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. To quote Gob from Arrested Development: "I've made a huge mistake." I designed this headphone hook with awesomeness in mind but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. It's like 4 hours versus 2 hours, and maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. I created a new project: the one-piece Bose QC35 Headphone Holder. I fiddled with geometry and fillets to get things to look nice and fit the headphones well. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. I created a new project: the one-piece Bose QC35 Headphone Holder. I fiddled with geometry and fillets to get things to look nice and fit the headphones well. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. This version is one piece, so four hours and a heck of a lot of support structure later, you've got this thing that will safely hang your Bose QC35 headphones without "pinching" the soft headband layer. If you love wasting time and filament on support structures, sanding, and finishing, this is the version for you! (Masochist!) If you want something easier, you'll want to wait for the two-piece model. Trust me, it'll be just as awesome, waste less time and plastic, and it'll have this cool slidy thing! I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. To quote Gob from Arrested Development: "I've made a huge mistake." I designed this headphone hook with awesomeness in mind but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. It's like 4 hours versus 2 hours, and maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. I created a new project: the one-piece Bose QC35 Headphone Holder. I fiddled with geometry and fillets to get things to look nice and fit the headphones well. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. To quote Gob from Arrested Development: "I've made a huge mistake." I designed this headphone hook with awesomeness in mind but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. It's like 4 hours versus 2 hours, and maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. I created a new project: the one-piece Bose QC35 Headphone Holder. I fiddled with geometry and fillets to get things to look nice and fit the headphones well. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. To quote Gob from Arrested Development: "I've made a huge mistake." I designed this headphone hook with awesomeness in mind but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. It's like 4 hours versus 2 hours, and maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. I created a new project: the one-piece Bose QC35 Headphone Holder. I fiddled with geometry and fillets to get things to look nice and fit the headphones well. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. To quote Gob from Arrested Development: "I've made a huge mistake." I designed this headphone hook with awesomeness in mind but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. It's like 4 hours versus 2 hours, and maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. I created a new project: the one-piece Bose QC35 Headphone Holder. I fiddled with geometry and fillets to get things to look nice and fit the headphones well. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. To quote Gob from Arrested Development: "I've made a huge mistake." I designed this headphone hook with awesomeness in mind but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. It's like 4 hours versus 2 hours, and maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. I created a new project: the one-piece Bose QC35 Headphone Holder. I fiddled with geometry and fillets to get things to look nice and fit the headphones well. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. To quote Gob from Arrested Development: "I've made a huge mistake." I designed this headphone hook with awesomeness in mind but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. It's like 4 hours versus 2 hours, and maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. I created a new project: the one-piece Bose QC35 Headphone Holder. I fiddled with geometry and fillets to get things to look nice and fit the headphones well. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. To quote Gob from Arrested Development: "I've made a huge mistake." I designed this headphone hook with awesomeness in mind but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. It's like 4 hours versus 2 hours, and maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. I created a new project: the one-piece Bose QC35 Headphone Holder. I fiddled with geometry and fillets to get things to look nice and fit the headphones well. I took a picture, measured the headband, created a curve in the software that mimics the curve of the headphones, extruded it, softened things up with a torus, and then made some more fillets. Oh, and earlier, I created a hook on the back because you never can tell when you're going to need a hook to hold stuff behind your headphones. So yeah, a hook, curves all over the place, fits my desk (at least on paper) perfectly well but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. You need a lot of overhead to get this to work so it takes 4 hours instead of 2. Maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the bed, and fits in one go on my Flashforge Creator Pro. To quote Gob from Arrested Development: "I've made a huge mistake." I designed this headphone hook with awesomeness in mind but there's literally no way to make this design sit flat on the bed. It's like 4 hours versus 2 hours, and maybe you can figure out a better way? My better way is the two-piece slide-together model that prints in two pieces, flat on the be
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