The current version of this plugin is way more useful. It lets you preview before you generate as well. Thanks for this video. I'll be using this to engrave a design on a table!
Cool. I think I’d have been tempted to design and print joints for the middle and sides too, just to make it look more funky. The top corner printed pieces could also have holes for the fishing line.
the odd borders kinda bug me -- i would have altered the sketch to make the outer border widths the same width -- great use of different materials. Since plexiglass is harder to get now and in high demand, this is a good method to use PETg film to create a barrier plus makes it be a design as well as a safety feature
Hi Leonid. I love your videos. You are a great teacher. Please advise on this issue: I have downloaded the Voronoi Plugin exactlly as you instructed. But the plugin does not appear after I restart the fusion 360. I use Fusion 360 on Windows 10. Appreciate your help.
Was there a reason you didn't create the screw holes in the sketch so they'd be lasered out with the rest of the design? You'd still have to punch through the sandwiched sheet, but that's easier than drilling. Also, as useful as the Voronoi plug-in is for creating Voronoi patterns, it's disappointing that the cells it creates are pretty uniform in size. If you figure out a way to get it to vary that feature, please post an update.
Good question Karl. When I first lasered the panels, I don't think I had completely decided how I was going to attach them. At first I was just going to staple the plastic to the plywood but then decided on using the m3 screws. You're right, It would have saved me a step if I had lasered the holes. I'll update you if I find a way to get variable sizes.
Hi Karl, In answer to your question how to vary the size of the cells - that's what the Lloyds Relax iteration is all about. The fewer the iterations, the more varied the cell sizes; the greater the iterations, the more uniform the cell sizes. The default of 10 iterations seems to provide an aesthetically pleasing mixture of cell sizes. I had the same question, did some research and discovered the answer. Have fun with experimenting.
Hello! What version of Fusion360 did you use in that video? For now it says, "The add-in(s) listed below use the Fusion 360 JavaScript API, which is being retired and will no longer be supported as of the January update of Fusion 360. If you want to continue using the script or add-in after the update, it needs to be re-written to use the Fusion 360 Python or C++ API. Voronoi.js" And the add-on is not available. I'm with Fusion 360 v. 2.0.9512 on Mac 10.13.6 p.s. Thanks for your uDemy courses, I really enjoy them! p.p.s. Nevermind. Answer from Hans Kellner the developer of the add-on: "New version will be posted soon."
Hi, great video. I'm actually trying to use this plugin myself, but I haven't gotten it to work. It told me that the installation was successful but it hasn't shown up on the create tab. I tried a lot of things like moving the file to a different location, using the version on the original creator's github, and a lot of restarting, but nothing has worked. It shows up on the add-ins list but not on the create tab. My other plugins are working just fine (although they are Python based). Do you or anyone else reading this have any idea how to fix it?
Looks good; however, I would take it down ASAP and put up a typical plexiglass barrier. There's no way I would chance people's health and safety for the sake of TH-cam.
it has a PETg film inside, I don't see it as being any different than a similar sized plexiglass barrier. No barrier is going to block air entirely -- that's not how they work.
@@kazolar PETG film is associated with face shields, not rigid barriers that are now common in stores. Plus, I can imagine the difficulty in cleaning as it is flimsy and supported by fishing line.
The current version of this plugin is way more useful. It lets you preview before you generate as well. Thanks for this video. I'll be using this to engrave a design on a table!
Cool. I think I’d have been tempted to design and print joints for the middle and sides too, just to make it look more funky. The top corner printed pieces could also have holes for the fishing line.
Great design
Good tips
Thanks for sharing :-)
Thanks Asger!
the odd borders kinda bug me -- i would have altered the sketch to make the outer border widths the same width -- great use of different materials. Since plexiglass is harder to get now and in high demand, this is a good method to use PETg film to create a barrier plus makes it be a design as well as a safety feature
Hi Leonid. I love your videos. You are a great teacher. Please advise on this issue: I have downloaded the Voronoi Plugin exactlly as you instructed. But the plugin does not appear after I restart the fusion 360. I use Fusion 360 on Windows 10. Appreciate your help.
Was there a reason you didn't create the screw holes in the sketch so they'd be lasered out with the rest of the design? You'd still have to punch through the sandwiched sheet, but that's easier than drilling. Also, as useful as the Voronoi plug-in is for creating Voronoi patterns, it's disappointing that the cells it creates are pretty uniform in size. If you figure out a way to get it to vary that feature, please post an update.
Good question Karl. When I first lasered the panels, I don't think I had completely decided how I was going to attach them. At first I was just going to staple the plastic to the plywood but then decided on using the m3 screws. You're right, It would have saved me a step if I had lasered the holes. I'll update you if I find a way to get variable sizes.
Hi Karl, In answer to your question how to vary the size of the cells - that's what the Lloyds Relax iteration is all about. The fewer the iterations, the more varied the cell sizes; the greater the iterations, the more uniform the cell sizes. The default of 10 iterations seems to provide an aesthetically pleasing mixture of cell sizes. I had the same question, did some research and discovered the answer. Have fun with experimenting.
@@PhDTKM Thanks! I kind of assumed that, but didn't bother to explore it since Vladimir couldn't figure out what it did.
Hello!
What version of Fusion360 did you use in that video?
For now it says,
"The add-in(s) listed below use the Fusion 360 JavaScript API, which is being retired and will no longer be supported as of the January update of Fusion 360. If you want to continue using the script or add-in after the update, it needs to be re-written to use the Fusion 360 Python or C++ API.
Voronoi.js"
And the add-on is not available.
I'm with Fusion 360 v. 2.0.9512 on Mac 10.13.6
p.s. Thanks for your uDemy courses, I really enjoy them!
p.p.s. Nevermind. Answer from Hans Kellner the developer of the add-on: "New version will be posted soon."
Ok, good. I'm getting the same message. Looking forward to the update so I can stop seeing that message.
Hi, great video. I'm actually trying to use this plugin myself, but I haven't gotten it to work. It told me that the installation was successful but it hasn't shown up on the create tab. I tried a lot of things like moving the file to a different location, using the version on the original creator's github, and a lot of restarting, but nothing has worked. It shows up on the add-ins list but not on the create tab. My other plugins are working just fine (although they are Python based). Do you or anyone else reading this have any idea how to fix it?
Nice video. How did I not know about the "inch" tip. Divider looks great. Mahalo for sharing! : )
Looks good; however, I would take it down ASAP and put up a typical plexiglass barrier. There's no way I would chance people's health and safety for the sake of TH-cam.
it has a PETg film inside, I don't see it as being any different than a similar sized plexiglass barrier. No barrier is going to block air entirely -- that's not how they work.
@@kazolar PETG film is associated with face shields, not rigid barriers that are now common in stores. Plus, I can imagine the difficulty in cleaning as it is flimsy and supported by fishing line.