• This forum is the machine-generated translation of www.cad3d.it/forum1 - the Italian design community. Several terms are not translated correctly.

powershape con superfici ....

  • Thread starter Thread starter gb13301
  • Start date Start date

gb13301

Guest
Hi, I would like to understand if powershape works well with the surfaces.... .
I am a student and I wanted to make experiences during the holidays.... I'm going out of school and I'd like to get ready to enter a company where they use it.
in this forum I read of very hard people with ps ...
If I have any information to ask, could you help me?
Thank you.
 
for me is powershape is in itself a good modeler, as everything depends then always on how and how much you know how to use it and this is especially true for surface modeling.

However we are here, hoping to be able to respond ;-)


sent by my ipad using tapatalk
 
Thank you!
Now I'm "playing" a little while in seeing what I can combine with this software... .
It would seem intuitive. ! !

Thanks and good start of the week!!
 
hi, where I work we use it for various types of models, and for now, we have not yet found a 3d that cannot be modeled.
There's a lot of options that help you, clench a little bit, limit a whistle... Have fun.
if you want to go to delcam tv that there are video tutorials
 
Hi.

many cads allow to model for surfaces and then to thicken them to create an object.

I know solidworks and rhino.

in evaluating the ability of a cad to model surfaces take into account the following:


solidworks
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Solidworks allows you to do everything without problems and it's parametric.
solidworks does not allow to model with surfaces in class a.

the zebra stripes you will get are as follows:http://www.ironcad.com/support/onlinehelp/images_unlocalized_general/zebratangent.gif
----...
rhino allows you to do everything, but it's not parametric and you don't have the history of the work.
rhino also allows to model with surfaces in class a.

the zebra stripes you will get are as follows:http://www.ironcad.com/support/onlinehelp/images_unlocalized_general/zebracontinuous.gifas you see, rhino allows the designer to create surfaces that do not create living edges.

If you mirror your face on the hood of a car, which is a surface in class a, you will certainly see it deformed but you won't see corner edges.


Technically speaking the surfaces in class to are those where on the edges of fitting the zebra stripes are continuous and with derivative before and second continuous.



Hi.
best enrico
 

Forum statistics

Threads
44,997
Messages
339,767
Members
4
Latest member
ibt

Members online

No members online now.
Back
Top