Google cardboard 3.0 template pdf download






















This is not Google Cardboard V2. With these 25mm diameter lens, it was like tunnel vision and did not feel like a vr experience at all. Great piece of kit for a great price. It really sends you to another world. The design is nice but there are a few downsides. I do prefer clicking the screen instead of a button on the side.

The cardboard is a lot stronger than I first thought, which is great as it makes a strong product. I bought it as a present but did use it myself and it held on quite well. Overall, a pretty good product! Quite boring because you can only turn your head around. Danielle A. Very easy to use. Arrived very fast. I love the design and colors of the VR Device, it works well with my galaxy note 5, and it is comfortable with the strap.

This is such an awesome product. I saw online where you could make these. I saw them here and saw how inexpensive they were and had to get them. Also, I knew they would be built properly. They come all neat and secure in a cardboard type envelope. They are easy to fold right in to shape. You pop your smart phone in the front in the front and use the Velcro tab to hold it in. Easy peasy. I have a Samsung Galaxy S6 and it worked great.

I downloaded a few virtual apps to go along with it from the play store ahead of time, including a virtual roller coaster app. I really had no idea what to expect before I put the glasses on. I actually got a little motion sickness. It feels like you right on the ride.

So weird and so cool. I did receive this product at a discounted rated for my honest and unbiased review.

It in no way affected my review or opinion of the product. What a great product. Peter S. Have you made your own Google Cardboard headset? If so, how did it turn out?

How to make your own Google Cardboard headset Virtual reality headsets are becoming more and more accessible to the everyday consumer. Interested in building your own? We'll walk you through the process! How To By Taylor Martin. This Google Cardboard headset is too small to be used with larger devices like the Nexus 6. For that, you will need a headset based on Google Cardboard 2. I cut it off and opened up the hole for access to the neodymium magnet, which will operate as your select button when using the headset.

Viewer profile generator Regardless of the size, shape, or material of your VR viewer, make sure it provides a great experience. Viewer profile generator.

Get the latest news from the Google VR team. I cut both my templates and cardboard pieces upon a copy of a tabloid-format newsweekly that was folded open. After carefully cutting out the templates with the X-Acto, I used the glue stick to paste them onto the bottom interior of the pizza box.

The fully assembled template for the Viewer Case was longer than either the length or width of the pizza box. So I split this template into two, figuring that I could join the separate cardboard pieces with masking tape. Once the templates are in place on the cardboard, it's time to cut the cardboard itself.

I did not bother to cut out the interior openings such as the circles and slits of the paper templates before pasting them onto the cardboard, as you can see in the upper left photo with the Lens Holder. I also chose not to cut certain outer edge areas of the paper templates because these edges require more precision.

I figured I could save the effort for when I needed to cut out the final cardboard pieces. The bottom photo shows a piece of the Viewer Case that I cut out from the pizza box using the utility knife and ruler. The template paper is still stuck to it.

Using the X-Acto knife upper right photo , I cut out the openings and cut away the curved edges. I did this by carefully stabbing through the template and cardboard, gently sawing a little along the path of the black lines, pulling out the X-Acto, stabbing through another part of the line, sawing, and so on. Take your time when doing this. Here is one of the two parts of the Viewer Case with the interior openings cut out and the curved edges finished.

On the lower right is the same piece with the template paper peeled off. Note that I ignored the two curved tabs at the bottom of the template.

I squared off this flap with sharp corners and a straight line. Similarly, I cut out as rectangles what are depicted on the template as two rounded openings. I figured these rounded designs were nonessential to the function of the viewer The top photo shows the other half of the Viewer Case cut from the pizza box, with the template paper peeled away. In the bottom photo, I joined the two pieces of the Viewer Case with masking tape -- that's the vertical strip of tape. Gray lines marked on the template show where you make a fold on the corresponding cardboard part.

So, using the X-Acto and ruler, I lightly scored these parts of the cardboard, folded out the cardboard along the scored line, and then folded it back in along the line. The strip of masking tape that runs horizontally in this photo is where I made a mistake: I scored a line along the wrong path.

So I used masking tape to strengthen the cardboard. Use the X-Acto to cut through the three outer curves first in these circular patterns top left and then cut the three inner curves next bottom left.

This will make removing these interior openings easier than trying to cut them out in a single clockwise or counter-clockwise path. The third and smallest piece of the Cardboard viewer is what I call the Vertical Divider.

Here I'm carefully finishing up cutting its edges. In the upper right is what the finished piece looks like. Bringing the three pieces together is fairly straightforward: You insert the lenses into the Lens Holder upper left photo , which you then fold upon itself like a flattened "N.

Because the repurposed lenses I used were slightly larger than those the Cardboard viewer was designed for, I had to cut away the tabs of the eyeholes in the Lens Holder so that they would fit. Alas, all that finely intricate cutting I did, which I was proud of, was for naught.

Next you place the tabs on the top of the Lens Holder the edge opposite where the nose cutout is into the corresponding slots on the Viewer Case.

Then brace it all by sliding the Vertical Divider's tabs into the appropriate slots on the other two pieces upper right. After that you just keep wrapping the Viewer Case around the Lens holder lower left , inserting tabs into slots as you go along. Google's official Cardboard kit included a piece of double-sided tape to hold the left flap of the Viewer Case into place, thus securing the entire thing together. But that fancy stuff is expensive!



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