Using Solidworks for over four years, I only ever used the sketch and features tabs. I simply never found an object I could not create with those mechanics and felt that I knew the potential that Solidworks had for creating 3D models. I now see that I have been wrong. This video has opened my eyes to the possibilities I had been ignoring all this time. Good stuff.
Same dude we didn't even learn about surfaces at all lol My assignment was to model a few everyday items and we only learned how to Boss Extrude/Cut, Boss Rotate Functions, and Sweep Functions plus basics in assemblies so I thought a spoon would be easy haha Ended up asking an engineering buddy of mine how he would start, he said with the surfaces feature tab and a sketch which puzzled me so I looked it up and found this very helpful video
@@brandonlambert1586 To be fair, surfacing is an advanced method for 3D modeling. Normally it is offered as a separate training at software resellers after you take the basic skills class. When dealing with product design that have what is know as compound curves and B-splines this is when surfacing really shines for the design of the part. In plastic part design ( I design plastic injected products) surfacing is used regularly and sometimes in conjunction with normal extrudes in some cases. The reason is that wall thickness for plastic parts need uniformity for good injection flow. After a part is designed in surfaces, trimmed, and then knitted, you complete the part by specifying a thickness for the walls. Solidworks will create smooth equal walls throughout the part as long as the radius is not too small. Have a great day! Solidworks since 1997!
A very easy to understand video about a seemingly difficult part! I was actually afraid of surface modelling but after grasping the concepts discussed in this video, I am feeling confident. Thank you. Keep up the good work!
I’m getting into surface modeling. I feel I’ve mastered all the features and sketching tools in Solidworks but Surface Modeling is just a whole different world in solid works, I feel like a beginner again but it’s fun
12:46 You could not pierce because your plane 1 was not intersecting the segment you chose to pierce to (Your plane 1 was not defined by intersecting the point but by an offset distance to the first plane)
I need a lot more work. I was able to make the spoon, but I'm not sure I could do it on my own. I need more practice with surfaces. This was a little hard to remember all of this. Thank you
Thank you for this tutorial! It's been three years since you made it, and I only just discovered it. Perhaps surface modeling in SWX is possible to learn after all!
Sir, really informative, but without using select manager also the required boundary surface can be created and also because of that you need not have to extend the boundary surface for the end part of that spoon that you did, I tried and I got the required spoon shape.
Hahaha! Before computers and 3D modeling it was even harder to make a spoon! Because you'd have to make so many real prototypes BEFORE the design was approved! Today, you can make several designs and submit for review BEFORE you make a 3D print of the product or part. 3D modeling software has saved everyone thousands of dollars and countless amounts of man hours . I guess you can say I'm a fan after using SolidWorks since 1997! Have a great day!
Very nice, clear tutorial, thanks! Just so you know, a couple of times when you said "horizontal distance", you really meant to say "Vertical distance" -no biggie.
Very nice work, please professor I have been trying to model that spoon I am on the last stage about to perform the surface trimming, but it did not work it keeps telling me cannot partition surface, the trim tool and target do not intersect. if the trim tool is a 3D sketch make sure the 3D sketch segments are coincident to the surface you are trimming. I dont know what to do again.
Hi! Fine tutorial. I have tried going through it twice, but when I try knitting the surfaces, only the two middle ones are knit together, the outer two don't. I have followed the tutorial in every detail, so it seems quite strange. Is there any secret trick to make it work, or is it just a coincidence that I face this twice at the very same point in the tutorial?
Using Solidworks for over four years, I only ever used the sketch and features tabs. I simply never found an object I could not create with those mechanics and felt that I knew the potential that Solidworks had for creating 3D models. I now see that I have been wrong. This video has opened my eyes to the possibilities I had been ignoring all this time. Good stuff.
SW is super powerful. Crazy the things you can do with it.
@@josegonzales5913 ++
Same using for2 years and never touched the surface tools.
IVE LEARNED MORE ON THIS CHANNEL ABOUT SOLIDWORKS THAN AT 4 YEARS UNIVERSITY FOR MECHANICAL ENGINEERING. TY. I LOVE YOU.
I have a exam today. I learned more with your videos in one night, than with my teacher in the whole semester! Thank you!
Same dude we didn't even learn about surfaces at all lol
My assignment was to model a few everyday items and we only learned how to Boss Extrude/Cut, Boss Rotate Functions, and Sweep Functions plus basics in assemblies so I thought a spoon would be easy haha
Ended up asking an engineering buddy of mine how he would start, he said with the surfaces feature tab and a sketch which puzzled me so I looked it up and found this very helpful video
Ya my friend took a class and he knew more than the teacher. Teacher loved him because he helped the rest of the class.
yeah - such is the way with youtube channels like this. I did a SW course and dumped their tutorials for ones like this and passed.
@@brandonlambert1586 To be fair, surfacing is an advanced method for 3D modeling. Normally it is offered as a separate training at software resellers after you take the basic skills class. When dealing with product design that have what is know as compound curves and B-splines this is when surfacing really shines for the design of the part. In plastic part design ( I design plastic injected products) surfacing is used regularly and sometimes in conjunction with normal extrudes in some cases. The reason is that wall thickness for plastic parts need uniformity for good injection flow. After a part is designed in surfaces, trimmed, and then knitted, you complete the part by specifying a thickness for the walls. Solidworks will create smooth equal walls throughout the part as long as the radius is not too small. Have a great day! Solidworks since 1997!
*smooth equal wall thickness
Excellent instruction. Even on faster playback you were easy to understand. A spoon is a great thing to model. I learned much. Thank you.
Your videos are always fast paced without missing any details.
A very easy to understand video about a seemingly difficult part! I was actually afraid of surface modelling but after grasping the concepts discussed in this video, I am feeling confident.
Thank you. Keep up the good work!
straight to the point, no unnecessary explanations. good job!
Exactly 😅
I’m getting into surface modeling. I feel I’ve mastered all the features and sketching tools in Solidworks but Surface Modeling is just a whole different world in solid works, I feel like a beginner again but it’s fun
I have a CSWP and I'm still a little intimidated by surfaces.
@@brandonthesteele how hard is the CSWA exam? I’m taking it at the end of this semester sometime around may. Do you have any tips for me?
I haven't touched Solidworks in over a year. This was a great refresher. Thank you for creating this video.
It really worked for me after I look and try some tutorials, yours is the one that worked. Owe you a lot.
You are a legend. This and the other spoon tutorials totally saved my ass.
I'm learning a lot from your videos, thanks.
Very good basics for surfacing as a beginner I found it very useful to grasp how to build profiles
Your videos have no parallel that I have found. Excellent stuff! Thank you!
Wow! The surface tools are powerful. Thank you.
Thank you ❤ its very easy to understand your videos every time when i watch i learn something new
Very efficient methods and the example is complex. Helped my Berkeley E26 lab assignment greatly. Thank you.
weird flex but okay
@@rajtagore6047 Berkeley's not even a flex bruh
@@ddh8624 what is why it is a WeIRd flex
O_0
12:46
You could not pierce because your plane 1 was not intersecting the segment you chose to pierce to (Your plane 1 was not defined by intersecting the point but by an offset distance to the first plane)
Thankyou for explaining why you need to do certain things instead of just doing it. You're awesome. Thankyou very much
I need a lot more work. I was able to make the spoon, but I'm not sure I could do it on my own. I need more practice with surfaces. This was a little hard to remember all of this. Thank you
It was very helfpful to understand some of the logics behind the design. Chapeau Mr
So easy but so hard if without thes video
Thanks!
That is what I think also.
i got confuse cause it gone wrong sometime but i learn a lot, thanks sir
Thank you for this tutorial! It's been three years since you made it, and I only just discovered it. Perhaps surface modeling in SWX is possible to learn after all!
I have been trying to change from Fusion to Solidworks and your video made things so much easier. Thanks :)
YOU ARE THE BEST .. A BIG HELLO FOR INDIANS PEOPLE FROM EGYPT
Great sir , I like your way of Explanation 👍👍👍👍👍.
Sir, really informative, but without using select manager also the required boundary surface can be created and also because of that you need not have to extend the boundary surface for the end part of that spoon that you did, I tried and I got the required spoon shape.
Thank you for this excellent surfacing basics video
I am very delighted to see your videos and you deserve some price
it's completely as same as my exam question in college.Thanks!
Great tutorial on surfaces. Very helpful for a novice and for the experienced
great video, helped me a lot to develop a part like this spoon
Very interesting, you explain in detail, perfect, I really enjoy listening to your presentations
Thanks! wonderful SOLIDWORKS instructing videos! 😎
I never thought making spoon is this difficult.
this is actually a spoon-feeding tutorial.. hahahaha
It's actually much worse in real life! LOL Check out Liberty Tabletop where I am the designer/toolmaker.
@@crunchymetal omg! But you'd use the same shape for the basic spoon, fork, knife and change the handles? Calavera!
Hahaha! Before computers and 3D modeling it was even harder to make a spoon! Because you'd have to make so many real prototypes BEFORE the design was approved! Today, you can make several designs and submit for review BEFORE you make a 3D print of the product or part. 3D modeling software has saved everyone thousands of dollars and countless amounts of man hours . I guess you can say I'm a fan after using SolidWorks since 1997! Have a great day!
Surfaces are very very difficult to make
Thank you very much! Its really hard to actually draw a spoon if you dont know how. Even though its a daily use item.
Greetings,
Jeff
Thanks so much for making this!! :D It made my homework make way more sense!
To all the engineering students. Keep practicing this. School will only have you take 1 or 2 classes on cad but it's super important
Thank you so much for teaching... Whenever I got problems in solidworks..I come here!
Thank you! I found a surface that was confusing.
ممنون از این کلیپ آموزشی که گذاشتید
Thenk you my brather this is very good lesson..
Klass
thank you so much for this great tutorial. I learned many things from your video and I'm keep watching and learning more from you. Thank you again.
I like your videos, because you sometimes make a mistake and when you correct it, it points out what mistake can be made.
nice, simple explanation nothing to be missed,.
Thank you for sharing! 👍👍👍
Oh my God, love it, love your work, and your channel, keep the good work 😆😆😆
Thank you very much i learnt so many important things from your video.
This is very helpful. Thank you!
спасибо за предоставленный способ построения модели
Cute! Even it look like inventor both programs follow suit!
You are e great teacher sir
Your video such a good thanks sir lot of things I learn
Amazing video! Thank you!
It’s always a pleasure to follow your SW courses…. 🤓
Thanks, you helped me understand several gaps that I had.
Very nice, clear tutorial, thanks! Just so you know, a couple of times when you said "horizontal distance", you really meant to say "Vertical distance" -no biggie.
Absolutely no one:
TH-cam recommendations: How to make a spoon in SolidWorks
I will try it with Pro E. Looks quite similar
Very good video. I learned a few more things about using surface tools.
Wow! Thank you for sharing! I liked your video and your lecture too. Successfully made. I learnt new arc technique too!
Дякую! Ви великий Шаман!
Excellent Tutorial - Thanks
I'm a catia user , solidworks is good too
This metod is good using curve rather than spline ,project curve for surfaces.
thanks any way.
Very nice work, please professor I have been trying to model that spoon I am on the last stage about to perform the surface trimming, but it did not work it keeps telling me cannot partition surface, the trim tool and target do not intersect. if the trim tool is a 3D sketch make sure the 3D sketch segments are coincident to the surface you are trimming. I dont know what to do again.
Same problem
Go through your sketch it'd be open somewhere
nice i have forget it onc 5 year out from university just 1 clibe 21 minuite the knoledge come back,
Thanks bro
You make good job sir👍
Çok faydali deilmi hocam
Thanks for your learning
Thank you for tutorial. Can you explaine how to creat press form for this dimension of spoon and account the flat blank for spoon?
bro What do you do exactly in real life.. are you part designer?
Thank you so much sir!
Very good tutorial, thank you
Well Done! Very Informative. Thank You.
You are good teacher
Became fan in first video
Thank you 🎉
Excellent Tutorial, thankyou very much
Aggg laaaati aaa veere.... Mza agya dekh k... 😯😯
This was so genius 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 great work sir
Hi! Fine tutorial. I have tried going through it twice, but when I try knitting the surfaces, only the two middle ones are knit together, the outer two don't. I have followed the tutorial in every detail, so it seems quite strange. Is there any secret trick to make it work, or is it just a coincidence that I face this twice at the very same point in the tutorial?
Sir, Suggest me Best laptop for CAD CAM 😀
Great Tutorial. Thanks!
Champion mate, excellent tutorial
Why are you taking the 3 curves bigger then the actual drawing of spoon???
But I appreciated for the video, it teaches a lot.
Thanks to teach , I learned a lot
Your videos are very trainer. Thank you.
I dont even have a CAD Programm installed in my computer and still watching this tutorial. 😂
nice tutorial sirji
Thank you it is a very good and clear videos
Thanks body, very useful
Your tutorials are brilliant though
Sir in the start and end session you are using boundary surface. . Why we are not go with loft....
Sir Plz make detail videos on solidworks cabinetry
Amazing work
Excelente vídeo, siempre me había complicado con las superficies, éste vídeo ayuda mucho, gracias por tu tiempo.
Wow I made a spoon. Thanks
Very nice...great video and you make it easy to follow
nice tutorial, very intresting and very usefull. there are so many chance to have a great job if we can master solidworks