Nicely done. Very thorough and easy to follow tutorial. I'm a linux user so I've never touched Fusion, but the concepts as you illustrated them could easily be ported over to onshape.
you also can extrude your "design" sketch and, instead of making it the inner body try to hollow it to make a cutting tool for the solid cone (leaving you with inner and outer bodies). Wall thickness of the "cutting body" then equals your tolerance on the finished model.
I just made my own following this but using onshape and man some of the tools on there are basic compared to the program you use. making the sweep was so much harder aye, but i did get there and it is printing now
I've tried printing this a few times but my printer always messes up on the bottom piece (the grey coloured one with the "arms" at the top). When it gets closer to the top it starts stringing and it gets very wispy looking to the point where it doesn't even complete the print no matter what. It's hard to explain through text but what print settings would you recommend?
This was a fantastic tutorial. I wish everyone made them as well as you do! Thank you
This was excellent😀
Thanks!
@@my3DPrintLab seriously was great, I'm trying to learn fusion after using tinkered, the directions where spot on
The more you know! I always wondered how they made these. Thanks for this!
Very nice! Thank you for this video.😊
Nicely done. Very thorough and easy to follow tutorial. I'm a linux user so I've never touched Fusion, but the concepts as you illustrated them could easily be ported over to onshape.
you also can extrude your "design" sketch and, instead of making it the inner body try to hollow it to make a cutting tool for the solid cone (leaving you with inner and outer bodies). Wall thickness of the "cutting body" then equals your tolerance on the finished model.
Hmmm..... I think I follow you. I'll see what I can do. Thanks!
I just made my own following this but using onshape and man some of the tools on there are basic compared to the program you use. making the sweep was so much harder aye, but i did get there and it is printing now
Awesome! Glad to know it CAN be done in OnShape. Now, if TinkerCAD would add a few more tools.... 😃
I've tried printing this a few times but my printer always messes up on the bottom piece (the grey coloured one with the "arms" at the top). When it gets closer to the top it starts stringing and it gets very wispy looking to the point where it doesn't even complete the print no matter what. It's hard to explain through text but what print settings would you recommend?
To make them slide very smoothly, buff some beeswax into the spiral contact areas. Works on both filament and resin prints.
Neat idea! I do this on my Lathe projects, never thought about using it here. Thanks!
Too Much for my brain. Hope everyone enjoys this.
Why -14.5 deg ? for a right angle trianlge with 100mm long leg and 25mm short leg, the angle should be ~14.03 deg