
Files (2)
Choose the needed variant and slice it; source file size is not printable volume.
Use the slicer's filament total; STL/3MF byte size is not a cost input.
Slice with the recommended material, infill, orientation, and supports.
| STL file | Role | Source size | PETG / TPU 20% | PETG / TPU 25% | 100% solid | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SSD_Mount_A.stl | Mount / bracket | 20.6 KB STL | Slice file | Slice file | Slice file | Small functional file: print slowly; consider 80–100% infill for durability. |
| SSD_Mount_B.stl | Mount / bracket | 142.0 KB STL | Slice file | Slice file | Slice file | Use double-sided tape for attachment as per design |
Saved setup guidance is used for material, infill, support, and per-file recommendation text; editable numbers are planning estimates only.
Tesla Model 3 Slide-out SSD Mount
Shared by
3DPrintedCarPartDescription
This SSD holder was designed to be mounted on the underside of the hinged phone dock door near the USB ports. The parts are attached using double sided tape. Once installed, the SSD can easily be slid out in the event that you need to review video from a Sentry Mode event. Hopefully Elon will give us the ability to review footage from the screen inside the car but until that time, being able to quickly remove the drive just makes sense. In order to make this fit, I selected a USB/SATA adapter with a fairly short SATA end. The exact one I used can be found here on Amazon. I printed mine with TPU but I might make it again using PETG. I chose TPU because it is soft and I figured it would be less likely to rattle and make noise but the fit was really snug so I don't think that would have been an issue.
Compatible Cars
Originally published on thingiverse.com by Kent M. (jellofrog) · License: CC BY
Share whether this print actually fits a real car. Installed photos and material notes make the catalog more trustworthy.
Related Parts
Finding specific fitment/category matches first.

