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4hv.org :: Forums :: Computer Science
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3D modelling software

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thedatastream
Sun Mar 04 2007, 10:40AM Print
thedatastream Registered Member #505 Joined: Sun Nov 19 2006, 06:42PM
Location: Yorkshire!
Posts: 329
As part of the design of my new DRSSTC, I want to do some basic 3D design of the base and primary and generate basic technical drawings from it so that I can use these when building my coil

The main requirement of the software is ease of use.
I don't care about 3D rendering or anything fancy.
Anyone got any good recommendations?

Thanks
James
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Carbon_Rod
Sun Mar 04 2007, 10:51AM
Carbon_Rod Registered Member #65 Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 06:43AM
Location:
Posts: 1155
Blender (free):
Link2

Also has some basic physics, python, and game engine support. You will have to look around for dxf and obj file converters...

For its file size its impressive. ;]
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...
Sun Mar 04 2007, 06:01PM
... Registered Member #56 Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 05:02AM
Location: Southern Califorina, USA
Posts: 2445
I am addicted to SolidWorks. It is uber expensive (but not if you use te 100% p2p discount) and incrdibly bloated (4 disks to install it, requires a mildly high end graphic card to run, etc). But it has a very resonable learning curve (I was cranking out pretty complex stuff after 20hrs of tinkering) and once you know how to use it you can create incredibly complex models very quickly.

The general interface is quite straitforward, you click 'extrude' then a plane, make a shape, then set the thickness. Then you can do another extrude, or a cut, which works the same. Things get nsaty when you try to edit round shapes, drilling a hole in a curved surface, making helixes/toroids, etc. But there are a lot of refrence designs out on the net tongue

But the best part is converting the 3d models into drawings. You just right click on a part, and say 'create drawing' and then you can drag the different projections of the part around on a piece of paper. Then click between 2 points, and a dimension is added between them. Do a hole annotation on all of the holes (if you used the hole wizard when making the model it will properly call out all of the holes) and viola, you have ave a drawing.

For my renderings see my website About 30hrs of rendering went into that. Here That drawing took about 30 minutes.

So far my biggest beef with it is that it is only windows, no linux version sad Although I hear it might run under wine... If not it is going to be slow going with vmware, or dualbooting windows...
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Sam
Sun Mar 04 2007, 06:51PM
Sam Registered Member #227 Joined: Mon Feb 20 2006, 10:47PM
Location: Cambridge Ontario, Canada!!
Posts: 127
3d max i think its called, You get get a trial.
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Steve Conner
Sun Mar 04 2007, 07:42PM
Steve Conner Registered Member #30 Joined: Fri Feb 03 2006, 10:52AM
Location: Glasgow, Scotland
Posts: 6706
There's a "100% discount" on SolidWorks? Cool! We had a guy come round to our work and try to sell us it for $20k.

I always used AutoCad or Autosketch for stuff like that, again with a "100% discount" cheesey I messed with Caligari TrueSpace for a while, but it's not usable as a CAD package, it's only for making nice looking pictures.
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Alex
Sun Mar 04 2007, 07:57PM
Alex Geometrically Frustrated
Registered Member #6 Joined: Thu Feb 02 2006, 04:18AM
Location: Bowdoin, Maine
Posts: 373
Blender, wings3d, povray. You might even consider using google sketchup. It looks pretty neat and it's supposed to be easy to use. All of these choices are free and legal.

[edit] Heh, check it out: A google sketchup model of a tesla coil.
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thedatastream
Sun Mar 04 2007, 08:32PM
thedatastream Registered Member #505 Joined: Sun Nov 19 2006, 06:42PM
Location: Yorkshire!
Posts: 329
Wow thanks for all the replies :) Ideally I'd like something like Solidworks - it's what the MechCAD guys use at work and it looks incredibly powerful. However for the amount of time I'm going to spend on it I'm not sure it's worth learning it.

I've just downloaded Sketchup and I'm going to give it a spin. If that doesn't hit the spot then I'm going to try blender or one of the others.

I should have added - "cheap is good, free is better" ;)

Thanks
James
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Bjørn
Sun Mar 04 2007, 10:57PM
Bjørn Registered Member #27 Joined: Fri Feb 03 2006, 02:20AM
Location: Hyperborea
Posts: 2058
Some people find this to work for them: http://www.rhino3d.com/

I have tried most of the programs mentioned here and on average they are really bad. Nothing much seems have happened in user interface development since the Atari ST and 720kB floppies.
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Nucleophobe
Mon Mar 05 2007, 02:01AM
Nucleophobe Registered Member #108 Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 11:44PM
Location: Billings, MT
Posts: 61
I'm using Unigraphics NX4 at school right now. It's beautiful, but very expensive (25k+)



1173060304 108 FT3458 Cclamp2
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RickR
Fri Mar 23 2007, 03:56PM
RickR Registered Member #93 Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 04:11PM
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 64
Alibre has a free 3D modeler. I've just started getting acquainted with it, but it seems to have a lot of functionality. It comes with a set of tutorials to get you started. All the reviews I've read of the free version were positive as well.

Oh, and they have a user forum as well.

Note that I'm new to 3D modeling as well, so if anyone else has used this software I'd like to know what they think.

Rick
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