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⚠️ Important | Libfredo 15.6b introduces important bugfixes for Fredo's Extensions Update

Geometry Creation Question

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  • B Offline
    Box
    last edited by 7 Jul 2013, 13:59

    I'm glad we were able to sort that out for you Dave.

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    • D Offline
      Dave R
      last edited by 7 Jul 2013, 14:07

      @box said:

      I'm glad we were able to sort that out for you Dave.

      I'm glad you were, too. πŸ˜„

      Etaoin Shrdlu

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      • J Offline
        jeff hammond
        last edited by 7 Jul 2013, 17:53

        .

        Future Reference:

        .
        CL_skin.jpg

        dotdotdot

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        • D Offline
          Dave R
          last edited by 7 Jul 2013, 18:02

          Tried that. It didn't help in my model. Follow Me worked perfectly, though.

          Etaoin Shrdlu

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          • C Offline
            Chris Fullmer
            last edited by 8 Jul 2013, 19:10

            On pieces like that Dave, I'm always interested in how would they have actually made that in the real world, with wood. Would you be able to recreate that process in SU? Those cool joints and tapers done in wood are very fascinating and often look complex to me.

            Chris

            Lately you've been tan, suspicious for the winter.
            All my Plugins I've written

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            • D Offline
              Dave R
              last edited by 8 Jul 2013, 19:51

              Hi Chris,

              In the real world you would start with pieces of wood that are a fair amount bigger than the final assembly and shape it down after attaching the parts. I've see several approaches to joining the parts for something like the leg I've drawn. If you want I'll draw a couple of them up for you.

              Etaoin Shrdlu

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              • D Offline
                Dave R
                last edited by 8 Jul 2013, 21:33

                Chris, here are a few examples. There are other possibilities. In any case the blanks are larger than the final leg. As you can imagine you would end up with a different look with each of them due to the way the crossing grain meets. There are other ways, too.

                From left to right, Mortise and tenon, bridle, modified bridle, a sort of mitered butt joint. In the last you might use loose tenons or dowels.

                Joints.png

                On that last one you might have a sort of tongue and groove joint which would make the leg stronger than the dowels of loose tenon.

                Etaoin Shrdlu

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                • C Offline
                  Chris Fullmer
                  last edited by 8 Jul 2013, 21:38

                  And then how do they get the final tapered shape? A lot of sandpaper? πŸ˜„

                  Lately you've been tan, suspicious for the winter.
                  All my Plugins I've written

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                  • D Offline
                    Dave R
                    last edited by 8 Jul 2013, 21:44

                    Well-trained termites. πŸ˜†

                    You'd probably rough out the pieces--turn most of the vertical piece on a lathe, maybe--before assembly. Then after assembly finish the shaping. Of course if this was being made in a factory they would be cutting them with a CNC machine. In a home shop you would probably bandsaw the horizontal piece roughly to shape and use a large router bit or shaper to round over the edges. If you notice, I left a straight, untapered section on the vertical piece. This would allow that to be shaped along with the horizontal piece while the tapered section could be turned on the lathe before assembly.

                    then lots of sandpaper. πŸ˜‰

                    Etaoin Shrdlu

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                    • P Offline
                      pilou
                      last edited by 8 Jul 2013, 22:30

                      You can also try to find in the nature a crossing brunch of tree!
                      it's was like that for some pieces of boat! πŸ˜‰
                      here for a sternpost πŸ˜‰

                      http://bertan.gipuzkoakultura.net/23/argazkiak/g/123.jpg

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

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                      • D Offline
                        Dave R
                        last edited by 8 Jul 2013, 22:58

                        Good knees are hard to find these days, Pilou. and finding four that are T-shaped and the right size even harder. πŸ˜’ πŸ˜„

                        Etaoin Shrdlu

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