Via engadget
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Spoiler alert: a reoccurring cast member bids farewell in the latest James Bond flick. When the production of Skyfall
called for the complete decimation of a classic 1960s era Aston Martin
DB5, filmmakers opted for something a little more lifelike than computer
graphics. The movie studio contracted the services of Augsburg-based 3D
printing company Voxeljet to make replicas of the vintage ride.
Skipping over the residential-friendly MakerBot Replicator,
the company used a beastly industrial VX4000 3D printer to craft three
1:3 scale models of the car with a plot to blow them to smithereens. The
18 piece miniatures were shipped off to Propshop Modelmakers in London
to be assembled, painted, chromed and outfitted with fake bullet holes.
The final product was used in the film during a high-octane action
sequence, which resulted in the meticulously crafted prop receiving a
Wile E. Coyote-like sendoff. Now, rest easy knowing that no real Aston
Martins were harmed during the making of this film. Head past the break
to get a look at a completed model prior to its untimely demise.
