vascon2196 said:O.K. Pat.....instead of screen shots I took video screen captures of me creating a crank disc, crank pin, and then assembling both parts together. I also downloaded a 4-40 set screw from McMaster Carr. Almost everything they sell is available as a SolidWorks CAD model.
Chris
Pat J said:Rob-
I agree, $4K is pricey for the home hobby market, and Alibre is a steal, but for my work, the plan is to use Solidworks for production, so there is much at stake as far as time, deadlines, client satisfaction, etc. and even a small savings in time can equal a large savings in money.
Solidworks seems to be robust in enough ways that I think in production, for the time saved, it will pay for itself many times over.
I liken it to a milling machine with dials only and manual operation, comparted to a mill with power feeds on each axis and digital readouts. A hobbyist does not need all the bells and whistles of power feed and DRO (although you see more than a few on these pages), but a production guy could not operate efficiently without these items.
The hobbyist cannot afford SW, and the production guy cannot afford not to have SW. That's my justification anyway.
I discovered a few things last night playing with SW.
There are numerous tutorial files located at C:/ProgramFiles/SolidWorksCorp/samples and /tutorials, including parts, assemblies, drawings, etc. You can open these files and play around with them.
Also worked on "relations". As someone mentioned, you are not going to do much 3D without understanding "relations".
There are also a number of video tutorials at the SW website.
Although the examples in the tutorials that come with SW are not the video type, they do have some good features, for instance, if the tutorial tells you to select a tool button from one of the many many toolbars, it can be a challenge to find the button. But if you run the tutorial on half the screen, and the program on the other half, then you can pick the button icon in the tutorial, and the actual button is highlighted with a flag in the program window. That is a real time saver for a beginner.
Solidworks also has a "motor" feature that allows you to attach a motor to any rotating part and make it move. For instance, you can attach a motor to a crankshaft in an assembly, and when you start the motor, the antire assembly animates. You can also pick two shafts, and apply a fan belt.
Making progress.
Pat J
jpeter said:I was just reading the student version is $99. Trouble is it times out in one year.
I also notice available for free is a student version of Inventor, not a shabby program either. Its what I use. A cursery look makes it appear as if the only down side to the free version is when printing the border of the print includes a banner informing it is not to be use for commercial purposes. Check it out.
Pat J said:I can draw shapes, but putting them in the right place on the right plane is not yet something I have mastered.
Move over Brian, Bob is coming in with the 3D.
Pat J
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