You are the best I have ever found on UA-cam. I enjoy every video you post and find it very interesting to see how you can do the same part with different methods. I am learning faster than before. I struggled for the past two weeks with another video until I found your channel. Thank you so much. I bought a 3D printer first then I was stuck on which program to use and how to learn it, and here I am cruising through the video and building my confidence.
Thank you so much for your comment and encouragement! I am super glad that you found our channel and that you are finding so beneficial. Please keep in touch with us as to your progress. All the best!
That’s a humble comment! Thank you. I often felt that way about tutorials too, but learn tons from them including shortcuts and extra tips and tricks throughout. Remember, that these tutorials will get more and more complex as they proceed. Have you watched any of our other videos yet? We have some more advanced tutorials in our Short Tutorials and CAM playlists. Stay tuned for more and thanks so much for your support! Here are the other playlists as mentioned above: Short Tutorials: ua-cam.com/play/PLLm7Yjr9z_z0GjYh4AvGC660HXPbQwB7W.html&si=krT9Zz-zfsQDzHoE Metal CAM ua-cam.com/play/PLLm7Yjr9z_z24oVrRH8IOfpblwltoGhbS.html&si=kRrFp1SilzuaPK7x
Greate tutorial for the beginners! Especially good that you cover several ways to reach the goal. And you sounds like a person who likes what he doing ))
Thank you so much for your nice comment and support. We are going to keep trying to improve with our tutorials, and kind comments like yours are super encouraging.
@@learnitalready When I tried fusion foe the first time, I faced the problem when the video is clear but you can't repeat it by your own, the skill is absent .In this case a simple homework task would help much.
Thank you for showing the two methods but then combining them into the "correct" way. Love the content and very thorough....will keep watching / liking / and commenting some
Thank you. I found the second way a bit confusing but I can see how it will make more sense as my fusion skills progress. It’s good to know that there are multiple ways.
You’ve got it! They’re just tools to get a job done. Some tools are better than others, some are easier to use, some are more expensive but it’s just a matter of getting used to each one.
I almost gave up learning 360 Fusion until I came around to your tutorials. Thank you for opening my eyes to the power of this 3D programme. I am still a beginner, but I am a beginner on my way forward. By the way - how do you make the drawing with the different views, plane and cross sections?
That is an amazing comment to have received. Thank you for expressing those sentiments. Glad you didn't give up and super glad that you have found our channel beneficial. Regarding drawings, I would love to put this on my to-do list of tutorials. So many on my list and just not enough time in the day. Maybe I'll be able to get to it in the near future. Thanks again. Hope to hear from you again soon! All the best!
You are an excellent instructor, thank you for your good work. By the way, your voice reminds me of another excellent Fusion instructor here on UA-cam.
@@althe111 He’s got some great videos! Glad you are pursuing your learning on Fusion 360 through many sources. Lots to learn with this amazing program.
Thanks so much for commenting. Glad you’re enjoying it so far. Hope you enjoy our other tutorials too. Please let us know how you’re progressing. All the best!
When you click "finish sketch" at 2:47 your drawing switches to an isometric view. I'm unsure as to what I'm doing diffeant, my drawing remains in the "top" view. For those who are experiencing this hover your cursor over the "view cube" upper right, a small "house" looking icon appears over the top left of the view cube, click on the house and your drawing will switch to the isometric view.
I like doing sort of a hybrid of this I like the top sketching more, but prefer to use pattern. I didn't do the hard way as using a pattern made more sense. I am curious outside of having a part that has the same size holes/features, but not equally spread out. What are some other use cases for doing the harder method you described?
Excellent comment! You’ve got the main gist of it… sketching the harder way, by sketching each angle, would be used for times when features like holes are not equally spaced or patterned. This tutorial is just showing the basics of being able to come to the same conclusion using different methods to prepare students be able to understand more difficult sketching in the future. I appreciate the comment very much. Thanks for tuning in. Feel free to comment on any tutorial you watch. Take care!
For some reason in example 2 I had trouble selecting the feature and the axis during the revolve, I had to keep doing it over till it was selectable. Not sure why.
There could be a few reasons why that might be happening. Can you explain a little more what you did differently to make it selectable please? Or did you not see what you did differently?
@ Yes, not exactly sure what I did differently. I hit escape and back a few times was finally able to select object but if I remember correctly I had to change my view to select the axis. Selection seems to be an issue for me in fusion possibly a hardware or graphics issue with my laptop. Like I was just following your video of the dice and had to do the same thing to select the three divots for extrusion cuts, but then had no issue selecting the rest. Weird.
Impressive! You’re flying through these tutorials. Over-constrained dimensions happen when you apply two constraints that constrain the exact same feature. Review carefully what you have dimensioned or constrained and try to discern what has been constrained twice.
Sorry it took me so long to reply. I am trying to follow on by doing what you are doing and I can't see it well enough to do EXACTLY what you're doing. so I noticed you have some new videos and I'll try those. Your videos are very good, it's just that I'm slow at this stuff.@@learnitalready
You are the best I have ever found on UA-cam. I enjoy every video you post and find it very interesting to see how you can do the same part with different methods. I am learning faster than before. I struggled for the past two weeks with another video until I found your channel. Thank you so much.
I bought a 3D printer first then I was stuck on which program to use and how to learn it, and here I am cruising through the video and building my confidence.
Thank you so much for your comment and encouragement! I am super glad that you found our channel and that you are finding so beneficial. Please keep in touch with us as to your progress. All the best!
At first, I thought your lesson was beneath me🙄. But I stuck it out, and actually found a bit or two that got the brain gears turning. Thanks! 🙂
That’s a humble comment! Thank you. I often felt that way about tutorials too, but learn tons from them including shortcuts and extra tips and tricks throughout. Remember, that these tutorials will get more and more complex as they proceed.
Have you watched any of our other videos yet? We have some more advanced tutorials in our Short Tutorials and CAM playlists.
Stay tuned for more and thanks so much for your support!
Here are the other playlists as mentioned above:
Short Tutorials:
ua-cam.com/play/PLLm7Yjr9z_z0GjYh4AvGC660HXPbQwB7W.html&si=krT9Zz-zfsQDzHoE
Metal CAM
ua-cam.com/play/PLLm7Yjr9z_z24oVrRH8IOfpblwltoGhbS.html&si=kRrFp1SilzuaPK7x
Greate tutorial for the beginners! Especially good that you cover several ways to reach the goal.
And you sounds like a person who likes what he doing ))
Thank you so much for your nice comment and support. We are going to keep trying to improve with our tutorials, and kind comments like yours are super encouraging.
@@learnitalready When I tried fusion foe the first time, I faced the problem when the video is clear but you can't repeat it by your own, the skill is absent .In this case a simple homework task would help much.
@@artemgoncharenko646 Excellent suggestion. Thank you! I will have to implement that in future tutorials.
Thank you for showing the two methods but then combining them into the "correct" way. Love the content and very thorough....will keep watching / liking / and commenting some
Much appreciated! Thank you for your comment and support!
Thank you. I found the second way a bit confusing but I can see how it will make more sense as my fusion skills progress. It’s good to know that there are multiple ways.
You’ve got it! They’re just tools to get a job done. Some tools are better than others, some are easier to use, some are more expensive but it’s just a matter of getting used to each one.
I almost gave up learning 360 Fusion until I came around to your tutorials. Thank you for opening my eyes to the power of this 3D programme. I am still a beginner, but I am a beginner on my way forward. By the way - how do you make the drawing with the different views, plane and cross sections?
That is an amazing comment to have received. Thank you for expressing those sentiments. Glad you didn't give up and super glad that you have found our channel beneficial.
Regarding drawings, I would love to put this on my to-do list of tutorials. So many on my list and just not enough time in the day. Maybe I'll be able to get to it in the near future.
Thanks again. Hope to hear from you again soon! All the best!
This is great value. Very good tutorial.
Thanks so much! Hope you enjoy the rest of the series.
You are an excellent instructor, thank you for your good work. By the way, your voice reminds me of another excellent Fusion instructor here on UA-cam.
Thank you for your comment! That was very kind of you to say. I’m curious to know who I sound like. 🧐
@@learnitalready His name is Vladimir (I think) but he has the Desktop Makes channel.
@@althe111 He’s got some great videos! Glad you are pursuing your learning on Fusion 360 through many sources. Lots to learn with this amazing program.
Both methods are good but component 2 is easy. in my opinion your teaching is very very best.A lot of thanks
Wow! That is a very kind comment. Thank you so much for saying and for taking the time to write.
I sketched a 1.5 construction line from centerpoint vertical to fid the borehole centerpoint.
Great job! 👏
Great introduction to revolve and pattern. I'm going to need to do it a lot more before I'm comfortable with it. :)
Thanks so much for commenting. Glad you’re enjoying it so far. Hope you enjoy our other tutorials too. Please let us know how you’re progressing. All the best!
This is awesome, I am still a little hazy on sketch, component, feature and how they all work together but I'm getting there.
Thanks for letting us know and for your support. We will try and explain that clearly in a feature tutorial. Thanks for the idea.
Another excellent video, another lesson learned, another comment and thumb up for Learn It!
Thank you so much! We are grateful that you enjoy and are benefiting from our tutorials so much.
understandable method and speed carry on the lessons please
Thanks so much!
New to your channel - CAD skills are improving with each video I watch!
Welcome aboard!
A great detailed video with simple explanation of reasons.
Thanks for your comment! Glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you for this series. You are a great teacher..
Thank you so much for commenting and your encouragement. Hope you keep learning with us and enjoy our other tutorials too.
When you click "finish sketch" at 2:47 your drawing switches to an isometric view. I'm unsure as to what I'm doing diffeant, my drawing remains in the "top" view. For those who are experiencing this hover your cursor over the "view cube" upper right, a small "house" looking icon appears over the top left of the view cube, click on the house and your drawing will switch to the isometric view.
Excellent! Thanks for posting this.
that was another great video. I appreciate you doing this!
Thank you! We appreciate your kind comment and support. Stay tuned for more.
I appreciate your patient explanations.
Thank you!
Great Video ! so easy to follow.
Thanks. So glad you enjoyed it!
I like doing sort of a hybrid of this I like the top sketching more, but prefer to use pattern. I didn't do the hard way as using a pattern made more sense.
I am curious outside of having a part that has the same size holes/features, but not equally spread out. What are some other use cases for doing the harder method you described?
Excellent comment!
You’ve got the main gist of it… sketching the harder way, by sketching each angle, would be used for times when features like holes are not equally spaced or patterned. This tutorial is just showing the basics of being able to come to the same conclusion using different methods to prepare students be able to understand more difficult sketching in the future.
I appreciate the comment very much. Thanks for tuning in. Feel free to comment on any tutorial you watch.
Take care!
👍👍😎👍👍
👍
For some reason in example 2 I had trouble selecting the feature and the axis during the revolve, I had to keep doing it over till it was selectable. Not sure why.
There could be a few reasons why that might be happening. Can you explain a little more what you did differently to make it selectable please? Or did you not see what you did differently?
@ Yes, not exactly sure what I did differently. I hit escape and back a few times was finally able to select object but if I remember correctly I had to change my view to select the axis. Selection seems to be an issue for me in fusion possibly a hardware or graphics issue with my laptop. Like I was just following your video of the dice and had to do the same thing to select the three divots for extrusion cuts, but then had no issue selecting the rest. Weird.
When I try to define the second 120 degree angle at 10:25 I get an "overconstrained" error.
Impressive! You’re flying through these tutorials.
Over-constrained dimensions happen when you apply two constraints that constrain the exact same feature. Review carefully what you have dimensioned or constrained and try to discern what has been constrained twice.
I combined number one with number 2 as the easiest way to
Awesome job!
A tad frustrated right now.
Hello! What is causing you trouble? Please let us know. We hope to help.
Sorry it took me so long to reply. I am trying to follow on by doing what you are doing and I can't see it well enough to do EXACTLY what you're doing. so I noticed you have some new videos and I'll try those. Your videos are very good, it's just that I'm slow at this stuff.@@learnitalready