Some how the original comment completely passed us by! Sorry about that Christian, and thank you Damian Kowalewski for stepping in. Gavin is actually using the SpaceMouse Wireless in this video, both devices offer the same result. Here is our review of the SpaceMouse Wireless designandmotion.net/autodesk/mfg-pages/inventor/my-time-with-3dconnexions-spacemouse-wireless/
I have a peice that I created from the loft feature, I now want to manipulate it using splines, but I have no idea how to do that. I try the convert option, but it just creates a seperate face on top of the face I'm trying to edit. Any ideas? Also, how do you turn of snapping when in sketch? It's super annoying.
Hi +Frank Lopez you would have to use the Inventor Mesh Enabler, downloadable from the Exchange App Store. Then Convert the resulting solid faces to T-Spline surfaces, and rebuild them from there.
this does not come included with any package ? im a student so i can get free but i need to know which package is better suited for me i dont have alot of memory to play with ,.....im into cad & cam as well as rendering and animation .....and suggestions? thanks
Frank Lopez both Inventor & Fusion 360 will have you covered on all those points. With Inventor you just need to add the Inventor HSM add-in. You school / uni also has access to all of Autodesk's software for free. Make sure they know that in case they don't :-)
oh they do , im the one who just found out lol thanks i guess im going to download Fusion then i hope i find good tutorials online for using freeform and more importantly CAM since thats my main use .....plus the use to import my own STL from autocad 123D since thats what ill be trying to CAM
Awesome presentation my man, thank you.
+Noel Marshall Thanks a lot, glad you appreciate it. Cheers for letting us know.
WOW, how do you manipulate the object so easy. What keys do you use?
I've wondered about this for a long time now! Does anyone know the answer?
Max Makes www.trustedreviews.com/3Dconnexion-SpaceNavigator-3D-Mouse-review-3dconnexion-spacenavigator-page-3
Fancy, thanks!
Some how the original comment completely passed us by! Sorry about that Christian, and thank you Damian Kowalewski for stepping in. Gavin is actually using the SpaceMouse Wireless in this video, both devices offer the same result. Here is our review of the SpaceMouse Wireless designandmotion.net/autodesk/mfg-pages/inventor/my-time-with-3dconnexions-spacemouse-wireless/
I have a peice that I created from the loft feature, I now want to manipulate it using splines, but I have no idea how to do that. I try the convert option, but it just creates a seperate face on top of the face I'm trying to edit. Any ideas? Also, how do you turn of snapping when in sketch? It's super annoying.
+6969SpAcE6969 have you tried this in Inventor 2016? Freeform bodies moved on substantially in that release.
can we use this method on STL imports? i created alot of models using AutoCAD 123D and thinking of upgrading to Inventor 2015/16
Hi +Frank Lopez you would have to use the Inventor Mesh Enabler, downloadable from the Exchange App Store. Then Convert the resulting solid faces to T-Spline surfaces, and rebuild them from there.
this does not come included with any package ? im a student so i can get free but i need to know which package is better suited for me i dont have alot of memory to play with ,.....im into cad & cam as well as rendering and animation .....and suggestions? thanks
Frank Lopez both Inventor & Fusion 360 will have you covered on all those points. With Inventor you just need to add the Inventor HSM add-in. You school / uni also has access to all of Autodesk's software for free. Make sure they know that in case they don't :-)
oh they do , im the one who just found out lol thanks i guess im going to download Fusion then i hope i find good tutorials online for using freeform and more importantly CAM since thats my main use .....plus the use to import my own STL from autocad 123D since thats what ill be trying to CAM
Frank Lopez Check out the CAD / CAM Australia & New Zealand channel, as well as the Autodesk Fusion 360 & Autodesk CAM channels.