SKF's online product tables are a lifesaver. They have been in my bookmarks for the past ten years. Although they have undergone some functional updates a couple of times in the past, they remain well-structured and allow users to find what they need in a short amount of time. An added bonus is that CAD models are available without the need to create an account. Thanks for sharing your workflow.👏
As always your comments are on point with the correct dose of humour and a sweet aftertaste of Dadjoke... Tasty!... 😂 Thanks man, as always, your praise is greatly appreciated and means a lot
Glad you liked it man. Thanks. I always use step, Gary. Then import directly into the assembly. I don't open and save as ad_prt first. I talk about that in a later video
3:20 I'm American and I can't even think in inches. Maybe because I use CAD for 3D printing so much, and everyone I watch on TH-cam to learn CAD also uses millimeters. Who knows. 12:27 what? Designing a part to be safe? That's not very 2024 of you. We need to design everything to be as cheap as possible, didn't you get the memo?
Hahahahaha, really cool comment! Yeah, metric is my go to. But over the years I have learned to do inches as well almost by necessity. And really, in this design has both, because the bearing was still metric. As for the design to be "safe". Hey... I'm showing how it's done. Whether you use that or not...
SKF's online product tables are a lifesaver. They have been in my bookmarks for the past ten years. Although they have undergone some functional updates a couple of times in the past, they remain well-structured and allow users to find what they need in a short amount of time. An added bonus is that CAD models are available without the need to create an account.
Thanks for sharing your workflow.👏
Exactly!!! Along with the quality of the product I always recommend SKF, if for nothing else, as a thank you for their tables
Ex Machina is rolling into success. Dual dimensions like a boss!
As always your comments are on point with the correct dose of humour and a sweet aftertaste of Dadjoke...
Tasty!... 😂
Thanks man, as always, your praise is greatly appreciated and means a lot
Great video. When you download from McMaster what format do you use? I didn't catch it from the video. Can't wait for the next one.
Glad you liked it man. Thanks.
I always use step, Gary. Then import directly into the assembly. I don't open and save as ad_prt first. I talk about that in a later video
3:20 I'm American and I can't even think in inches. Maybe because I use CAD for 3D printing so much, and everyone I watch on TH-cam to learn CAD also uses millimeters. Who knows.
12:27 what? Designing a part to be safe? That's not very 2024 of you. We need to design everything to be as cheap as possible, didn't you get the memo?
Hahahahaha, really cool comment!
Yeah, metric is my go to. But over the years I have learned to do inches as well almost by necessity. And really, in this design has both, because the bearing was still metric.
As for the design to be "safe". Hey... I'm showing how it's done. Whether you use that or not...