Stretch a roof
-
yes, not bad. thank you....
-
Here's my attempt. I simply used the from contours from the Sandbox tools. Probably not what you envisioned tho...
Rick
-
@rickgraham said:
Here's my attempt. I simply used the from contours from the Sandbox tools. Probably not what you envisioned tho...
Rick
DEFINATLEY not as Gai's looks SO much better.
Rick
-
Trying to do it myself produces nil.
Weld to make a continuous curve is inconsistent but works on parts, either quarter, half, or whole without the crossing ribs, but soap timeouts (Timelimit finished!)!
-
You work cheap, and fast, and well, Gai...
Thanks for being here.
-
Here is my attempt using TIG's Extrude edges by Rails. I have only done half as a demonstration. I think it works better for the corner with the straight edge although the other quadrant could be a bit smoother - perhaps by altering the number of line segments?
-
I did it also with TIGs EEBR and it worked very well. I have not posted it because it left a slight valley down the centre when I mirrored the half and I guess that is not required.
Edit: Thought I may as well post the skp!
-
@unknownuser said:
...but soap timeouts (Timelimit finished!)
You can download a new version that works until 10. October 2010.
-
@massimo said:
@unknownuser said:
...but soap timeouts (Timelimit finished!)
You can download a new version that works until 10. October 2010.
Thank you. I needed a translation!
-
Making the profiles [and rails], each with the same number of segments gives best results in EEbyRails - to weld complex sets of arcs/edges into one curve first select all and explode back to plain edges - they stay selected then use 'weld' to join them...
-
Thanks, I'll try to remember these tips.
@tig said:
Making the profiles [and rails], each with the same number of segments gives best results in EEbyRails - to weld complex sets of arcs/edges into one curve first select all and explode back to plain edges - they stay selected then use 'weld' to join them...
Advertisement