How do you determine what subD shape to start with in any given object? You mentioned you were going to extude a SubD circle, but then opted for a sphere...What would be a difference? Why not start with the circle you had before?
It is very useful and also authentic video tutorial. Thank you for your advance tutorial. Is it possible a create molding core and cavity of a product within Rhino.?
you can but it takes some skill to do so. There are no specific "mold making tools" however things like parting line curves, draft angle analysis and ribbon offset go a long way towards helping an experienced toolmaker do their thing.
Learned so much in an hour, thank you!
that's awesome- glad you enjoyed it!
Hi Mr. Kyle, could you please share the name of the software which you use to create the conceptual sketches? And do you use a pen tablet?
How do you determine what subD shape to start with in any given object? You mentioned you were going to extude a SubD circle, but then opted for a sphere...What would be a difference? Why not start with the circle you had before?
How do you get the dimension prompt on the sidebar when you create circles/objects etc., or is it just a Mac thing?
that's a mac thing - pc is in the
command line at the top.
Good work.
thanks! more coming!
Awesome video, thank you teacher. Regards
thanks for watching- more coming!
It is very useful and also authentic video tutorial.
Thank you for your advance tutorial.
Is it possible a create molding core and cavity of a product within Rhino.?
you can but it takes some skill to do so. There are no specific "mold making tools" however things like parting line curves, draft angle analysis and ribbon offset go a long way towards helping an experienced toolmaker do their thing.
@Rhinoceros3d thank you for your answer.
I think that Rhino more flexible compare to other software for 3D curve and etc.
@@ayturkayvaz6562 I agree 100% , but to be fair..I'm a little biased.. ;-)
Awesome tutorial. If Rhino only had the parasolid kernel to make/adjust/repair fillets and chamfers properly...
Thanks for watching!
Perfect
Thanks for watching!
Shelling hack.
Offset your sub d surface , convert to nurbs and use that for your inside surface.
sometimes that sub-d offset may fail. I'd say convert to volume->mesh->subd->polysurface is more reliable method IMO.
@@richardaubin1951 Thanks for the tip, i will try this out.
See the never fail shelling video. ShrinkWrap is the way to go for shelling that never fails