I recently bought a 2005 350 base coupe, and among the various bits that are expected to be messed up on an 18-year-old entry-level sports car was the passenger door vent. Removing it revealed that the comb which connects the three vanes was missing. I took out the driver's side vent for reference and made my own. I figure if mine was broken, someone else's likely is too so I should share. You will need 3 m2 cap head screws to fasten this to the vent body. The original uses 3 little balls that seemed like a weak spot in the design, especially for printing it, so I went with this instead. I may add another file with the original style as well later on.
Filament: </strong> Anycubic Standard Grey <br> <p class="detail-setting notes"><strong>Notes: </strong> </p><div><p>This design should be fine to print on an FDM printer as well. It shouldn't matter but I would recommend using a higher-temp material like ABS since it will be in the heating system of the car.</p></div>
I recently bought a 2005 350 base coupe, and among the various bits that are expected to be messed up on an 18-year-old entry-level sports car was the passenger door vent. Removing it revealed that the comb which connects the three vanes was missing. I took out the driver's side vent for reference and made my own. I figure if mine was broken, someone else's likely is too so I should share. You will need 3 m2 cap head screws to fasten this to the vent body. The original uses 3 little balls that seemed like a weak spot in the design, especially for printing it, so I went with this instead. I may add another file with the original style as well later on.
Filament: </strong> Anycubic Standard Grey <br> <p class="detail-setting notes"><strong>Notes: </strong> </p><div><p>This design should be fine to print on an FDM printer as well. It shouldn't matter but I would recommend using a higher-temp material like ABS since it will be in the heating system of the car.</p></div>