Visit brilliant.org/JokoEngineeringhelp/ to get started learning STEM for free, and the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription.
Hi , Joseph . Hope all is well with you and yours . Just curious if you have tried out the new freecad release yet . I haven't seen any videos from you in a while ? Looking forward to seeing some . Warmest Regards Terry Lembke
Brilliant video, really enjoyed! Had to try my self in freecad. The hexasphere was the hardest to replicate. But once completed, I understood how the shape actually look. For 3D-printing splitting the model in two identical halves one discover that the modeling could actually be done by just doing 2 180 degrees revolves. Anyway, thanks for the video, love your channel! Cheers from Norway, FreeCAD lover.
Hello Mr. May I know the specs of the computer you are using for the FreeCAD application I've upgraded my computer but it's still not responding during the simulation Thank You
I have multiple Xeon / i9 32 GB RAM SSD Nvidia Quadro M2200 / Geforce RTX 4070 The specs are probably not very useful. Edits can make things look faster, while recording the screen in 2K or 4K will make it look slower at the same time.
Me: Makes a video on an Icosahedron and laughs like a chimp when the preview of the complete Icosahedron shows on screen Joko: Makes a video on a Reuleaux rotor, a Mobius Strip, a 3D approximation of a 4D face with no volume (in FreeCAD!!!), and a Hexasphericon... In the same video... And he gives short bios of the original creators of each shape. Oh man...
But to be fair, I never figured out the Icosahedron until you did it! I think that's the real art! This video locked me up for a good two weeks trying to get it all done.
If you get the spheres right, indeed you end up with another shape of constant width. I realized I used a Reuleaux triangle to describe the 3D shape, it should be called a Reuleaux rotor in the video. Couldn't do all the interesting shapes out there, but I did as many as I could cover.
Visit brilliant.org/JokoEngineeringhelp/ to get started learning STEM for free, and the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription.
How people developed such things without the technology we have today is mindboggling. A true genius at work. Thanks for the interesting video.
Dude, thanks so much for doing all this stuff and promoting freecad along the way. Nice video.
Than you! I think everyone should use FreeCAD. It is great for learning and a good complement to anything else you may be running.
Hi , Joseph . Hope all is well with you and yours . Just curious if you have tried out the new freecad release yet . I haven't seen any videos from you in a while ? Looking forward to seeing some .
Warmest Regards
Terry Lembke
Very interesting video JOKO!
Thank you for this content
Thank you
Interesting stuff here Joko..Thanks for posting.
Brilliant video, really enjoyed! Had to try my self in freecad. The hexasphere was the hardest to replicate. But once completed, I understood how the shape actually look. For 3D-printing splitting the model in two identical halves one discover that the modeling could actually be done by just doing 2 180 degrees revolves. Anyway, thanks for the video, love your channel! Cheers from Norway, FreeCAD lover.
I love hearing from people in Norway! I hope all is well over there, greetings from AZ USA
Hello Mr. May I know the specs of the computer you are using for the FreeCAD application
I've upgraded my computer but it's still not responding during the simulation
Thank You
I have multiple
Xeon / i9
32 GB RAM
SSD
Nvidia Quadro M2200 / Geforce RTX 4070
The specs are probably not very useful. Edits can make things look faster, while recording the screen in 2K or 4K will make it look slower at the same time.
Ok thanks Mr.
What generation of processor is it for, Mr.
Me: Makes a video on an Icosahedron and laughs like a chimp when the preview of the complete Icosahedron shows on screen
Joko: Makes a video on a Reuleaux rotor, a Mobius Strip, a 3D approximation of a 4D face with no volume (in FreeCAD!!!), and a Hexasphericon... In the same video...
And he gives short bios of the original creators of each shape.
Oh man...
But to be fair, I never figured out the Icosahedron until you did it! I think that's the real art! This video locked me up for a good two weeks trying to get it all done.
@@JokoEngineeringhelp Yeah man, but this is pure gold right here. Really cool vid!!!
That isn't a Reuleaux tetrahedron (or a 2D triangle ), it should be the intersection of 4 spheres.
If you get the spheres right, indeed you end up with another shape of constant width. I realized I used a Reuleaux triangle to describe the 3D shape, it should be called a Reuleaux rotor in the video. Couldn't do all the interesting shapes out there, but I did as many as I could cover.