Sleepless Night Time Doodling
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Brilliant work as always ! Your reference library of cool old mechanical bits must be epic in size .

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Thank you sir. Fortunately most of my references are scans done by someone else and stored out on the web. I don't have to have a big stack of musty old books that way.

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Yummy! New house noises keeping you up?

I wanna see wireframe of here. You got a really nice transition. Are they separate pieces?
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Thank Rich.
We haven't even started moving yet and that house is keeping me awake at night.


Here you go. I did leave the yoke and the shaft as separate components because I was thinking I might want to use that yoke somewhere else and it would save me cleaning it up if I do. The transition is trimmed right up to the surface of the yoke, though. It could all be combined.
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Very nice. Power transfer shaft?
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Thank you. I guess it could be used anywhere you need a U-joint.
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@tuna1957 said:
Brilliant work as always ! Your reference library of cool old mechanical bits must be epic in size .

Ja! exactly what comes to my mind as well. I love Dave's mechanical "sleepless doodles" too, looking at them mostly without the slightest idea what they are for or what I am seeing

But what I have learned from Dave's "sleeplessness
" is to use more consistently the options of sketchy styles. I now do this regularly in communication graphics in the early stages of a project to avoid pointless and nurdish detail-blabla. In addition, these types of graphics actually evoke mainly very positive reactions - as seen in your beautiful work here Dave! 
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Thank you!
@hornoxx said:
But what I have learned from Dave's "sleeplessness
" is to use more consistently the options of sketchy styles. I now do this regularly in communication graphics in the early stages of a project to avoid pointless and nurdish detail-blabla.I do that, too. Often when I am designing a piece of furniture, I find it useful to include details that I don't want to show the client, at least in the early stages of the design. Sketchy styles (even the native Straight styles) can be used to do that.
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