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    Follow-Me Tool on Multiple Lines.

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    • pilouP Offline
      pilou
      last edited by

      About Latticeizer by TIG
      Seems there is a little problem when there is intersection of lines πŸ˜‰
      sure that must not be evident to resolve πŸ˜‰


      thicknes.jpg

      Frenchy Pilou
      Is beautiful that please without concept!
      My Little site :)

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      • pilouP Offline
        pilou
        last edited by

        thx for the explanation πŸ˜„

        Frenchy Pilou
        Is beautiful that please without concept!
        My Little site :)

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        • D Offline
          dtrarch
          last edited by

          ThomThom

          Probably something you already know but the script does not work on inclined curves or multiple inclined connecting lines.

          Sure would be nice to have this work on the above for vertical surface detail and boolean and ???

          Just a thought.

          dtr

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          • thomthomT Offline
            thomthom
            last edited by

            @dtrarch said:

            Probably something you already know but the script does not work on inclined curves or multiple inclined connecting lines.

            Yes. It will only work planar. That's by design as it simplifies things allot. 3D will have to come later.

            Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
            List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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            • TIGT Offline
              TIG Moderator
              last edited by

              To make it work in 3D you could...
              Take selected centre-lines that are on the 3D surface and 'drape' them onto a flat face above it.
              Run the tool and take the result and again 'drape' it onto the 3D surface below.
              Erase unwanted stuff.
              To 'drape' to flat you simply change all of the edge's z's to = flat plane (which is defined as above the lowest level of 3D surface).
              To 'drape' onto a surface you need to project a ray down from each edge's end-points onto the 3D surfaces faces and then do a global move by vectors on them to avoid 'folding' ?

              TIG

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              • Bob JamesB Offline
                Bob James
                last edited by

                Latticeizer: What a really cool tool, TIG 😎

                I don't know what this thing is or what I'd ever use it for, but I know that modeling it would have taken a lot longer than the two minutes it took to make it with Latticeizer πŸ˜†

                Sorry to "muscle in" on your discussion ThomThom, but this was just too much fun to pass up.


                ![A few quick lines, Latticeizer, render in IDX Renditioner and, voila: a really cool "Something"](/uploads/imported_attachments/YLJ3_Picture12.JPG "A few quick lines, Latticeizer, render in IDX Renditioner and, voila: a really cool "Something"")

                i7-4930K 3.4Ghz, 2x GTX780 6GB, 32GB DDR3-1600 ECC, OCZ Vertex 4 500GB, WD Black 3TB, 32TB NAS, 4x 27" Monitors, SpaceMouse Pro, X-keys XK-60

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                • Bob JamesB Offline
                  Bob James
                  last edited by

                  Once I got over the fun of trying latticeizer, I realized it had a very practical use for me:

                  My job involves design modifications for space vehicle launch facilities. In one of the facilities a launch vehicle is stacked vertically for testing prior to launch. That facility has several platforms that conform to the shape of the launch vehicle. Those platforms are made of steel ribbing with a steel plate welded to the top. Each platform may have a different size "hole" in it. Modeling these has been a chore: not a big chore, but time consuming. With Latticeizer the job becomes much easier.

                  The picture shows three phases of the modeling using latticizer:

                  1. Draw the 2D shape of the ribs
                  2. Run latticeizer
                  3. Put on a diamond no-slip pattern
                  4. Add fittings for folding
                  5. Duplicate it and flip it over

                  Unfortunately, latticeizer does not always work as expected. Sometimes the entire group just disappears, other times only parts of the group extrude and I spend a lot of time trying to "fix" it. One of the more benign examples is shown.

                  But, when it works it really is handy.


                  Latticeizer.jpg


                  Picture 19.JPG

                  i7-4930K 3.4Ghz, 2x GTX780 6GB, 32GB DDR3-1600 ECC, OCZ Vertex 4 500GB, WD Black 3TB, 32TB NAS, 4x 27" Monitors, SpaceMouse Pro, X-keys XK-60

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                  • TIGT Offline
                    TIG Moderator
                    last edited by

                    It's almost three years since latticeizer had any major changes... It was a bit buggy but I never looked to fix it 'cus no one asked... I'll review it and issue an update sometime... β˜€

                    TIG

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                    • Bob JamesB Offline
                      Bob James
                      last edited by

                      @tig said:

                      It was a bit buggy but I never looked to fix it 'cus no one asked... I'll review it and issue an update sometime... β˜€

                      I use it very often and would really appreciate an update: I've had as many failures as successes with it. It's soooo great when it works (but soooo frustrating when it does not).

                      I'm definitely "asking"

                      I've attached a "one off" I did this morning to show you a simplistic version of what I do "for real" at work.


                      That's my car in front, the Engineering Manager's car behind it and the IT Director's car in back. I'm the bald guy at the bottom

                      i7-4930K 3.4Ghz, 2x GTX780 6GB, 32GB DDR3-1600 ECC, OCZ Vertex 4 500GB, WD Black 3TB, 32TB NAS, 4x 27" Monitors, SpaceMouse Pro, X-keys XK-60

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                      • W Offline
                        watkins
                        last edited by

                        Dear Bob,

                        It is good to see that someone else in the space industry uses Sketchup. I get a lot of flak at work for using SU for concept designs. I'm supposed to use Inventor. I work on test facilities for the test and calibration of remote sensing instrumentation (terrestrial and planetary atmospheres), and have designed a few bits and pieces for space instruments too.

                        404 Not Found

                        favicon

                        (www.atm.ox.ac.uk)

                        The guys in the department designed and built the radiative cooler for the instrument CIRS on Cassini, which was quite a challenge.

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                        (www.atm.ox.ac.uk)

                        301 Moved Permanently

                        favicon

                        (irfu.cea.fr)

                        I would be interested to see more of your work.

                        Kind regards,
                        Bob

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                        • Bob JamesB Offline
                          Bob James
                          last edited by

                          @watkins said:

                          I would be interested to see more of your work.

                          Some of my work is shown at our website:

                          Link Preview Image

                          favicon

                          (www.calspace.com)

                          I've attached some that are not currently on the website. This and all my models are done in SU7.


                          Rendered in IDX Renditioner


                          Rendered in IDX Renditioner


                          Rendered in IDX Renditioner


                          IPF from SW2 PS.jpg

                          i7-4930K 3.4Ghz, 2x GTX780 6GB, 32GB DDR3-1600 ECC, OCZ Vertex 4 500GB, WD Black 3TB, 32TB NAS, 4x 27" Monitors, SpaceMouse Pro, X-keys XK-60

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                          • W Offline
                            watkins
                            last edited by

                            Dear Bob,

                            Great stuff!

                            I see you get to play with much bigger toys. Your modelling looks very good, and very informative.

                            Kind regards,
                            Bob

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