Thank you for another interesting exercise. I think I found one problem in your solution, plus there are a couple of alternates that simplify things. The problem is how you do the circle at 6:00 in the video. If I understand the drawing correctly, the arc of the circle you create and the arc of the inner part will NOT be the 8mm specified in the design. Note when defining dimensions on a circle or arc, you can right click on the arc to select the arc tangent for a dimension measurement. This will define a simple basis to get this measurement right. If you use the XY plane for your top view instead of offsetting it, you can use project/intersect to get the ends rather than using the small hole and a measurement. On the final extrude, you can use Intersect and avoid the outer square you create to do a cut. Thanks again for the exercises. I find them helpful.
I saw where he went wrong, but I don't understand your described solution either. To draw this correctly, I would create a vertical construction line 8mm from the small hole, then another one which splits the angle between that construction line and one of the interior lines which intersect with it. Where this second construction line intersects with the line of symmetry connecting the centers of the large and small holes should be the correct location for the center of your radius. EDIT: Here's an illustration of my proposed solution - imgur.com/a/EZvNOuA (Done in AutoCAD)
@@tuffaluffagus Starting at 6:00 in the video, do the following: 1) Go to dimensioning mode ('D' on the keyboard), 2) Right click anywhere in the drawing and select 'Pick Circle/Arc Tangent', 3) dimension the distance between the two circles at 8 as specified in the drawing, 4) add a tangent restraint between the line and the new circle as he does on his second circle in the video. The arc dimension will assure that the two circles remain the correct distance apart.
Thank you for the video! I want to note that the action at 15:40 to create a square is superfluous, you can immediately use Extrude together with the intersect operation and immediately get a part without creating a square as a formwork. Sorry for my bad English.
In the beginning I was like, wow this guy is unclear, but in the end I managed and I learned some nice stuff about design thinking in Fusion 360 thanks for this tutorial! :)
It's really weird how much easier your tutorial was than all these beginner ones. Even though you moved very quickly and your audio is not all that great, I was able to follow along, pause, replay and keep up really well. I try following other tutorials and they leave out lots of key details or shortcut keys and they go so slow that i almost forget the steps as i go. Thank you for this tutorial. :-)
@@SPARKPLUG98 Honestly it was more than good enough for the job. BTW you can use software to equalize the audio so you can make even a poor quality mic sound good. Thank you for the tutorial, I managed to make it on my 3rd try.
It's a very interesting exercise but I have found a mistake from time 6.00 when you are drawing the inner circle in the cutout. You have not managed to keep the distance of 8mm between the edge of the hole with the diameter of 12mm and the cutout in the centre of the part. i have changed this part first by using sketch dimension between the top inclined line and the offset line. Next I drew the perpendicular line at the point where the 12mm circle crosses the horizontal symmetry line, then offset of this line 8mm to the left after that I used the 3 point circle using the point on the symmetry line 8mm to the left from the 12mm circle and the tangent points on the inclined lines of the inner cutout finally I use Tangent constraint to ensure that the circle is tangent in 3 points that way when I finish sketch the distance between the 12mm hole and the inner cutout stays 8mm
same distance with circles on the left side, it should be 8mm. We need bigger cirle (52mm) to make it right. Thoes tricky little details that one can easliy overlooked.
Отличный урок. Большое спасибо за вашу работу. НО у вас есть ошибка. Расстояние между отверстием М8 и большим отверстием НЕ равно 8мм. Это хорошо видно на 6:25
I really really love your videos and you are very skilled! But kan You in your further videos talk a little bit slower. India people have an urge to speed up the talk. Tnx in advise and keep that videos rolling bro.
Look man i'm not a native English speaker (Russian actually), but let me tell my opinion, although your videos are pretty cool your English pronunciation is not so good - my advice is maybe you don't need to speak so fast and make it a little bit slower(or you should do something with the sound quality), because there are some moments in your video, in which personally I cant really understand a word. No offense ok - by the way I pressed like.
For anyone looking for a solution for the mistake around the 6 minute mark, I've made a sequence of illustrations explaining how I accomplished it in AutoCAD at imgur.com/a/EZvNOuA Besides that, overall great tutorial. Well presented.
Troy See Tai. Interesting, but I,m too slow to understand your correction. I visited the link and I´ll try to follow, but I did not understand why you did what you did.
Troy, nice solution, but it needed quite a bit more work to get the internal curve in Autocad. BTW, in Fusion I used the solid Filllet tool to get the internal curves, instead of sketching them myself, and got the same resulting body.
@@ReidarVik Sorry for the late reply. I missed the notification for your comment. The thickness of the material, between the hole on the right and the fillet on the left, should have ended up as 8mm, as indicated in the drawing, however the mistake in the walk-through causes it to end up smaller. My solution shows how the find the correctly sized circle and where to place it's center point in order for the distance between the two radii to end up at the correct 8mm apart. I hope this helps. Good luck.
@@juanbueno8876 Thanks. Yes, I could have used the automatic tools for the program to find the solution for me, but I was actually interested in understanding the geometric principles required to draw it manually, like with pencil and paper. Thanks for sharing your experience. I'm looking forward to playing around with Fusion one day.
@@tuffaluffagus Totally agree with your approach to learning, and that is the best way to master something: By doing it yourself. About Fusion 360, after looking at it and playing with it for some months now, I see is has become a well rounded CAD system. Not the best in all areas - like sketching, where AutoCAD is miles ahead - but a fairly good overall and recommended pick for product design and manufacturing. And it seems it will keep getting better: With the frequent updates, and the multitude of new preview (beta) features available, one can tell the development effort and investment that Autodesk is putting on Fusion. Also I have found that the bug/glitch is low, compared to typical modern software that has ever shorter development cycles.
Is there a way to change the visual build platform settings? I want the measurements to be going in the other direction so i know how large my sketch is. I keep having to click the measure option and measure it but i would rather just lay it out and know the length and width without having to do that. I am talking about the mm measurements that are displayed on the X and Y plane. I mainly want the X plane to go in the opposite direction instead of going to the left side. I would also like more visual measurements such as 1mm, 2mm, 3mm, 4mm etc. I want the measuring direction to look like this: commons.princeton.edu/josephhenry/wp-content/uploads/sites/71/2018/07/Capture5-1024x595.jpg
Wouldn't hurt to learn keyboard shortcuts, unless of course you only have one hand. Watching you struggle with that filet button before selecting each vertex was painful, and ALT-TAB is quicker for switching between your app Windows
Watching these at the end of 2024 and this whole playlist has been a gold mine of learning.
thank you for making these videos!
16:00 You could use “intersection” and not need the outer rectangle.
Thank you for another interesting exercise. I think I found one problem in your solution, plus there are a couple of alternates that simplify things. The problem is how you do the circle at 6:00 in the video. If I understand the drawing correctly, the arc of the circle you create and the arc of the inner part will NOT be the 8mm specified in the design. Note when defining dimensions on a circle or arc, you can right click on the arc to select the arc tangent for a dimension measurement. This will define a simple basis to get this measurement right.
If you use the XY plane for your top view instead of offsetting it, you can use project/intersect to get the ends rather than using the small hole and a measurement.
On the final extrude, you can use Intersect and avoid the outer square you create to do a cut.
Thanks again for the exercises. I find them helpful.
I saw where he went wrong, but I don't understand your described solution either.
To draw this correctly, I would create a vertical construction line 8mm from the small hole, then another one which splits the angle between that construction line and one of the interior lines which intersect with it. Where this second construction line intersects with the line of symmetry connecting the centers of the large and small holes should be the correct location for the center of your radius. EDIT: Here's an illustration of my proposed solution - imgur.com/a/EZvNOuA (Done in AutoCAD)
Couldn't you just make a 3 tangent circle between that 8mm contruction line and the two converging lines?
@@tuffaluffagus Starting at 6:00 in the video, do the following: 1) Go to dimensioning mode ('D' on the keyboard), 2) Right click anywhere in the drawing and select 'Pick Circle/Arc Tangent', 3) dimension the distance between the two circles at 8 as specified in the drawing, 4) add a tangent restraint between the line and the new circle as he does on his second circle in the video. The arc dimension will assure that the two circles remain the correct distance apart.
@@dude6935 So were my thought´s 👍
@@dude6935 yea this helped me figure it out. thank you
Thank you for the video! I want to note that the action at 15:40 to create a square is superfluous, you can immediately use Extrude together with the intersect operation and immediately get a part without creating a square as a formwork. Sorry for my bad English.
In the beginning I was like, wow this guy is unclear, but in the end I managed and I learned some nice stuff about design thinking in Fusion 360 thanks for this tutorial! :)
It's really weird how much easier your tutorial was than all these beginner ones. Even though you moved very quickly and your audio is not all that great, I was able to follow along, pause, replay and keep up really well. I try following other tutorials and they leave out lots of key details or shortcut keys and they go so slow that i almost forget the steps as i go. Thank you for this tutorial. :-)
I have a laptop , and that's it .
Internal microphone is not that good ,
@@SPARKPLUG98 Honestly it was more than good enough for the job. BTW you can use software to equalize the audio so you can make even a poor quality mic sound good. Thank you for the tutorial, I managed to make it on my 3rd try.
GOD BLESS YOU ALWAYS Mr Spark Plug
im abeginner , ur channel is helping me a lot , thank you
Supeer I really enjoyed the video specialy last step which you done the magic tentannannnn .... 😊🙏
Thank you for really helpful video from Thailand
i am improving alott from one exercise to another. thankyou so much for your videos.
As a beginner, I learned some great tips from your video, thanks!
Great work 👌🇨🇵
It's a very interesting exercise but I have found a mistake from time 6.00 when you are drawing the inner circle in the cutout. You have not managed to keep the distance of 8mm between the edge of the hole with the diameter of 12mm and the cutout in the centre of the part. i have changed this part first by using sketch dimension between the top inclined line and the offset line. Next I drew the perpendicular line at the point where the 12mm circle crosses the horizontal symmetry line, then offset of this line 8mm to the left after that I used the 3 point circle using the point on the symmetry line 8mm to the left from the 12mm circle and the tangent points on the inclined lines of the inner cutout finally I use Tangent constraint to ensure that the circle is tangent in 3 points that way when I finish sketch the distance between the 12mm hole and the inner cutout stays 8mm
I was also wondering about that. I just used a two-point circle, that worked out quite nicely as well
I used a tangent circle (three point I think).
same distance with circles on the left side, it should be 8mm. We need bigger cirle (52mm) to make it right. Thoes tricky little details that one can easliy overlooked.
Clicking ur ads bc ur doing Amazing job
Excellent video. Thank you
Dude I have subscribed you from 3 accounts
Thanks Spark Plug, have to slow the videos down but well worth the effort
Отличный урок. Большое спасибо за вашу работу. НО у вас есть ошибка. Расстояние между отверстием М8 и большим отверстием НЕ равно 8мм. Это хорошо видно на 6:25
good
I learned some things. Thanks.
Very Nice! Thank you.
Hi dear
Outstanding keep it up
Alam sir and we all work together in etf
Thanks man
This is not a professional way to make drawings. But you made an effort and I think we should appreciate it.
I really really love your videos and you are very skilled! But kan You in your further videos talk a little bit slower. India people have an urge to speed up the talk. Tnx in advise and keep that videos rolling bro.
Does anybody know what's name of this part?
Браво!!!
Nice tutorial foe beginners! In my opinion you are a bit too fast and lots of miss clicking. Otherwiss really nice tutorial. Subscribed!
Look man i'm not a native English speaker (Russian actually), but let me tell my opinion, although your videos are pretty cool your English pronunciation is not so good - my advice is maybe you don't need to speak so fast and make it a little bit slower(or you should do something with the sound quality), because there are some moments in your video, in which personally I cant really understand a word. No offense ok - by the way I pressed like.
What is the part's name?
Don't know
6:27 you didn't keep the dimension, now you have 6mm instead of 8mm.
nice job but need to slow down a bit for beginners
Why the slight music in the background? If you added it later, not really needed.
nices ! thanks.
When you mirrored the line joining the 2 circles, the tangent constraints were lost. Is this important?
tangent restraints are needed if you want the part to be parametric.
weldone keepit up dear
Safir sir and me also work togeter
in Etf
For anyone looking for a solution for the mistake around the 6 minute mark, I've made a sequence of illustrations explaining how I accomplished it in AutoCAD at imgur.com/a/EZvNOuA
Besides that, overall great tutorial. Well presented.
Troy See Tai. Interesting, but I,m too slow to understand your correction. I visited the link and I´ll try to follow, but I did not understand why you did what you did.
Troy, nice solution, but it needed quite a bit more work to get the internal curve in Autocad. BTW, in Fusion I used the solid Filllet tool to get the internal curves, instead of sketching them myself, and got the same resulting body.
@@ReidarVik Sorry for the late reply. I missed the notification for your comment. The thickness of the material, between the hole on the right and the fillet on the left, should have ended up as 8mm, as indicated in the drawing, however the mistake in the walk-through causes it to end up smaller. My solution shows how the find the correctly sized circle and where to place it's center point in order for the distance between the two radii to end up at the correct 8mm apart. I hope this helps. Good luck.
@@juanbueno8876 Thanks. Yes, I could have used the automatic tools for the program to find the solution for me, but I was actually interested in understanding the geometric principles required to draw it manually, like with pencil and paper. Thanks for sharing your experience. I'm looking forward to playing around with Fusion one day.
@@tuffaluffagus Totally agree with your approach to learning, and that is the best way to master something: By doing it yourself. About Fusion 360, after looking at it and playing with it for some months now, I see is has become a well rounded CAD system. Not the best in all areas - like sketching, where AutoCAD is miles ahead - but a fairly good overall and recommended pick for product design and manufacturing. And it seems it will keep getting better: With the frequent updates, and the multitude of new preview (beta) features available, one can tell the development effort and investment that Autodesk is putting on Fusion. Also I have found that the bug/glitch is low, compared to typical modern software that has ever shorter development cycles.
the same process is applicable in freecad
Is there a way to change the visual build platform settings? I want the measurements to be going in the other direction so i know how large my sketch is. I keep having to click the measure option and measure it but i would rather just lay it out and know the length and width without having to do that. I am talking about the mm measurements that are displayed on the X and Y plane. I mainly want the X plane to go in the opposite direction instead of going to the left side. I would also like more visual measurements such as 1mm, 2mm, 3mm, 4mm etc. I want the measuring direction to look like this: commons.princeton.edu/josephhenry/wp-content/uploads/sites/71/2018/07/Capture5-1024x595.jpg
There is nothing in the link you have Attached, iam still unclear what u trying to ask?
Bro how change sheet metal modelling in fusion 360
Go to modify - sheet metal rules
spark plug ? where ?
Looks nothing like a spark plug WTH
Please Sir violin top arch upload tutorial
4:23 got a problem here
Please Sir mobile modeling tutorial upload this
Ohk bro , I will definitely give this idea a consideration
@@SPARKPLUG98 please Sir Samsung Galaxy Note 10 modeling this
Wrong built at 6:26
I finally find this comment.
ok, but a video of how somebody is doing things is not always a good instruction video. Annoying backnoises, sometimes chaotic (not well prepared).
Wouldn't hurt to learn keyboard shortcuts, unless of course you only have one hand. Watching you struggle with that filet button before selecting each vertex was painful, and ALT-TAB is quicker for switching between your app Windows
Просто, но есть лишние движения
Taaadaaaa
Thank you Sir! Very informative and easy to follow.
Trostereiret.no
Do something about your extremely poor audio. I can’t watch your videos due to this issue. Please take this as constructive criticism
I cannot understand what you are saying