What CAD software you use?
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@arhi said in What CAD software you use?:
I did purchase netfabb studio
You mentioned an education licence for autodesk. If that's the case you probably already have access to current netfabb studio through that.
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@zapta said in What CAD software you use?:
@Phaedrux said in What CAD software you use?:
I still use tinkercad for editing STL meshes.
It's also a good starting point for kids.
hm, I tried to edit a mesh in tinkercad 10+ times and never managed to do it.. something about it do not sit with me so I did not show it to my kids as I can't show them how to use it
I wonder how it compares to FreeCAD.
Feature wise, try FreeCAD and decide for yourself, I was impressed today (not so earlier). Licence wise FreeCAD is open source
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@arhi said in What CAD software you use?:
I can't show them how to use it
Take the built in tutorial and make yourself a key chain. It's pretty easy.
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@Phaedrux said in What CAD software you use?:
@arhi said in What CAD software you use?:
I did purchase netfabb studio
You mentioned an education licence for autodesk. If that's the case you probably already have access to current netfabb studio through that.
Awesome, I found it, had to disable ABP and uBLOCK plugins to actually get it
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@arhi said in What CAD software you use?:
@Phaedrux said in What CAD software you use?:
I don't mind paying for good software
I don't mind paying for software that makes me money and I use a lot of very expensive tools for my work, but this is hobby and there I have limits. SolidWorks is 4000$ + 1300$ yearly, not something I can really approve for myself... I didn't have problem paying 150$ for s3d but you can't compare 150 vs 5300 for first year
I did purchase netfabb studio (4.0 or 4.1 I Don't remember) that was rather expensive with a promise of good slicer... that was iirc 1000eur back in the day, too bad that app don't work on my computer any more ... since they as company do not longer exist no clue how to reenable that licence (I still have the usb dongle sitting somewhere) .. too bad as netfabb studio was very capable mesh handling tool
Lol, well, sorry to break it to you, but NetFabb was bought by Autodesk! Haha, man. They are ruining your life.
[edit: seems you already knew that ]
They still sell it, at an exorbitant price, and it looks like they added some things and made it look nicer. If you ask nicely, they may grant you a license based on your old credentials.
Many of the features of NetFabb are in Fusion. The FFF slicing, iirc, is not actually directly lifted from NetFabb, but many of the surrounding features are.
MeshMixer and NetFabb both pop their heads up within Fusion.
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@bot said in What CAD software you use?:
Lol, well, sorry to break it to you, but NetFabb was bought by Autodesk! Haha, man. They are ruining your life.
I don't mind, to be fair the old 4.1 version had everything I need (except for slicer but thats not why I purchased it), if I could just get my 4.1 to work I'd be ok but the contacts I had in netfabb are not there any more and they made the whole thing with the dongle weird (they make you a special licence key that they send you via email and it then works with that dongle ?!?! so when I replaced the computer - puf, nothing works any more, nor a I can download the netfabb 4.1 any mroe )
but installing premium 2020 now .. looks like this edu licence works ok
(hm, just god "install error 0: the operation complete successfully !?!?!?!")
Many of the features of NetFabb are in Fusion. The FFF slicing, iirc, is not actually directly lifted from NetFabb, but many of the surrounding features are.
MeshMixer and NetFabb both pop their heads up within Fusion.
Well the major stuff I used netfabb for was fixing meshes and booleans between meshes as it was apart from AOI the only tool that was doing it properly. Unfortunately these tasks in f360 don't work nearly as good as they did in netfabb
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@arhi Until I got into 3D printing 5 or 6 years ago, I had never used any CAD software whatsoever. I taught myself enough OpenScad to get done what I need to do, but I've never found the time to teach myself anything else, apart from a brief flirtation with FreeCad which is completely alien to an old fart like me.
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Hi,
I use "Moment of Inspiration" because it works the way my mind does - if that makes any sense.
Frederick
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@fcwilt said in What CAD software you use?:
Moment of Inspiration
That's an interesting one. I'd never seen that before.
http://moi3d.com/ -
@Phaedrux said in What CAD software you use?:
@fcwilt said in What CAD software you use?:
Moment of Inspiration
That's an interesting one. I'd never seen that before.
http://moi3d.com/I've tried many of them, both free and paid.
For whatever reason MOI was the most intuitive for me. It just seemed to make sense, things seemed "natural".
I suspect that is likely related to how my mind works and others may not like it at all.
Frederick
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@fcwilt I never even heard of it, and looks like I'm not the only one .. that's why I created this topic as I'm sure some diamonds will pop up ...
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First would be Solidworks, distant second would be Solid Edge, followed by f360 for when I have to stay in OSX.
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@Phaedrux said in What CAD software you use?:
It is annoying when the STL translation service is down and I can't export an STL, but that's pretty rare.
Unless I’m misunderstanding, right click component name in browser, “save as STL,” no cloud export required.
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I used DesignSpark Mechanical for a few years before I switched to Fusion360. It's about as easy to learn and use a SketchUp, but much more powerful and doesn't turn out bad STL files that have to be repaired before they can be printed.
Solvespace is an interesting program...
I've made and printed a few small "artistic" pieces generated using Structure Synth. If you like Open SCAD you'll love structure synth! It's not for modeling real objects, but more of a mathematical sculpting tool that uses recursion.
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The US based organization, EAA (Experimental Aircraft Association) offers a Solidworks license with its $40/year membership. If anyone tries it please report back on its restrictions, if any. I thought about joining and getting a license but with Catia (From Dasault Sytemes also the creators of Solidworks) at work and BobCad/Cam for hobby I'd just assume not jump on another learning curve.
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@3DPMicro It's the same as the other educational/military/gov deals - for one year and not for commercial use.
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@whopping-pochard said in What CAD software you use?:
@Phaedrux said in What CAD software you use?:
It is annoying when the STL translation service is down and I can't export an STL, but that's pretty rare.
Unless I’m misunderstanding, right click component name in browser, “save as STL,” no cloud export required.
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@Phaedrux Fusion360 does the STL conversion in the cloud. When they are updating their servers, usually on Sundays in the US, saving as STL usually doesn't work. When they finish server maintenance, STL conversion becomes functional again.
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@mrehorstdmd said in What CAD software you use?:
I used DesignSpark Mechanical for a few years before I switched to Fusion360. It's about as easy to learn and use a SketchUp, but much more powerful and doesn't turn out bad STL files that have to be repaired before they can be printed.
Solvespace is an interesting program...
I've made and printed a few small "artistic" pieces generated using Structure Synth. If you like Open SCAD you'll love structure synth! It's not for modeling real objects, but more of a mathematical sculpting tool that uses recursion.
+1 for Design Spark mechanical.
It's apparently a very slightly dumbed down version of an expensive program called "Spaceclaim", offered by RS as a tool to design things using their components (and therefore buy them).
The only price of freedom is that you have to close the initial RS page on startup.
I was advised of some custom stl export settings, and it does seem to do really "high poly" resolution in prints (if that's the right way to say it).
I haven't seen a way to add text to a design with it though...is that possible?
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@Kolbi so one year and that's it? No renewal?