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    Something odd about scale to a neg cone

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    • Dave RD Offline
      Dave R
      last edited by

      No. The Scale tool is not "performing an error."

      It's kind of like using a pitch fork to bail water out of a boat. It's the wrong tool for the job.

      Etaoin Shrdlu

      %

      (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

      G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

      M30

      %

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      • BoxB Online
        Box
        last edited by

        If you want to make a cone on a cone using scale on a cylinder, then you need to scale a ring at the points of the cones.

        Use Pushpull on the circle then ctrl pushpull and you will have a cylinder with a ring, then scale the ring.
        But it's not the best way.

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        • mitcorbM Offline
          mitcorb
          last edited by

          @DukeJazz:
          I thought you were just musing on an intriguing, but currently useless tendency in this tool to fool the display language. I think Kito Raupp does this kind of thing with flair.

          I take the slow, deliberate approach in my aimless wandering.

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          • dukejazzD Offline
            dukejazz
            last edited by

            This may help, the plugin tool I used in 3a was: make_faces.rb.

            Ok

            Is this behavior of scale tool, performing an error?

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            • fredo6F Offline
              fredo6
              last edited by

              @dukejazz said:

              The Problem:
              I wanted to make a cone(D)from a pulled circle(A).
              So I resized the top edge, but I over resized it scale to a neg -.60 and got (B)
              Well I thought I will get rid of unneeded edges and got (C)

              That's odd

              1. This behavior (A)to(B) is odd?.
              2. This behavior (B)to(c) is odd?.
              3. 30 min later I use a plugin path to get from(B)to(d), but is thier a easy natual way other than scale 0?
                4)Is this behavior a resizing error? (scale tool)
                [attachment=1:3rzzp4p6]<!-- ia1 -->pic_0034.jpg<!-- ia1 -->[/attachment:3rzzp4p6]
                history of change's
                add(scale tool)thank dave
                add QA#

              A to B is normal, because you still have single segments bordering the lower and upper cones.
              Note that with the SU Scale tool, you cannot enter 0 as a valid scale factor.

              I just realized that FredoScale can do it

              [attachment=0:3rzzp4p6]<!-- ia0 -->Cone from Cylinder.gif<!-- ia0 -->[/attachment:3rzzp4p6]

              Be careful however, because for whatever reasons, you SU creates zero-length edges at the spike of the cone (they come from the original upper circle). But you can easily get rid of them, for instance by just moving the whole cone via the Move tool).

              Fredo


              Cone from Cylinder.gif

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              • mitcorbM Offline
                mitcorb
                last edited by

                Ya know.. while we talkin' Why can't FredoBend have inference... you know endpoint, edge, midpoint, blackspot, whatever. Or did I just forget, and it's a tab enabled parameter?

                I take the slow, deliberate approach in my aimless wandering.

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                • dukejazzD Offline
                  dukejazz
                  last edited by

                  Skills test:
                  Finding a recovery path from B to D
                  Thier no wrong anwers here
                  pic_0044.jpg
                  Thank you: by dave
                  "It's kind of like using a pitch fork to bail water out of a boat. It's the wrong tool for the job."
                  Also
                  Thank you: by Box:Yes these are safty cone good product.
                  pic_0047.jpg
                  This void of non closure to the point, this is usually where discussion ends. but by digging deeper there more to learn on this subject.
                  Thank you: by T. Burch
                  pic_0048.jpg
                  Thank you: by Fredo6
                  pic_0053.jpg
                  No. The Scale tool is not "performing an error." by dave

                  Info:by Dukejazz Skin pixs are complex 💭
                  pic_0045.jpg
                  Work by Dukejazz: Need axes place at tip of cone to center of rotated plain.
                  pic_0046.jpg
                  It may not be the fastest way Dave but it can be done,
                  google sketchup way or by a plugins: recover from B to D.

                  I open a area or door on why transparency holes occurs in scaling, pulling and twistihg object negitive.

                  I would like to here more, this subject is sill open.

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                  • dukejazzD Offline
                    dukejazz
                    last edited by

                    It is true not useing a right tool can cause oddies (problems)
                    So you did anwser question 1,2 is right
                    but the science or infor 4 is still open.

                    My insight(I exspected):in (B), is a cone on top of the other.

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                    • Jean LemireJ Offline
                      Jean Lemire
                      last edited by

                      Hi folks.

                      Scaling one end of a cylinder to make a cone will yield only a cone frustrum, even after scaling repetitively as much as you want since a scale factor of 0 is not allowed.

                      When you scale symmetrically the top circle of a cylinder by -1 using a corner handgrip, you are actually changing the position and orientation of all the edges that where forming the cylindrical surface, with the xception of their lower edges which remain unaltered on the untouched bottom face. The net result is that each of the rectangular facet that make the cylindrical surface cannot really exist since their original four corners are not coplanar any more.

                      SU is going berseck with that.

                      Try this : Create a cylinder and erase all but one of the facets making the cylindrical surface. Scale the top by -1. See what happens with the facet during the scaling operation. See what happens when rotating the top face.

                      By the way, you can also create a "cone" by only rotating one face or a cylinder by 180°. The result will be quite similar to the scaling action. In fact, you get two incomplete cones.

                      Want to see funny stuff, rotate by 180° then scale by -1.

                      A fast way I know of making a cone is to create a circle and then add two radiuses on it. You need two radiuses to have an edpoint, at the circle center, that you can then pull up (or down) along the blue axis to create the cone. Use Autofold for the move to work. When done with the move, smooth the two lines that are, in fact, the two radiuses having been reoriented.

                      A triangle lathed around a circle is another fast way.

                      Both of these method will yield a pure cone.

                      Another fast way is probably to add a cone component and to resize it

                      Just ideas.

                      Jean (Johnny) Lemire from Repentigny, Quebec, Canada.

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                      • dukejazzD Offline
                        dukejazz
                        last edited by

                        Something nice about scaling to a neg cone

                        Shaders for sketchup

                        Scale to a neg cone: shaders by rotaton of base.
                        pic_0073.jpg
                        No texture.
                        No rendering.
                        No shodows turn on
                        Just plain colors and tranparency: 100% sketchup
                        pic_0074.jpg
                        Lamp is a point light and below is a sorce light
                        pic_0071.jpg
                        Again shadows not needed to render the light.
                        Looking though a sorce light.
                        pic_0075.jpg

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