Thank you so much for these Clear and concise Was losing hope on learning in retirement Learned to draw in 1970s by hand but was never an office worker This is inspiring me
I appreciate how helpful and unambiguous these sessions are! I have made a collection of handy items in Onshape as a result and the resulting 3D prints are so pro-looking!
I am always impressed by your teaching style. You have a true gift for teaching. One question though. The construction line you placed at 48" is in the CENTER of the extruded circle. But if I wanted the top of the drawing to equal 48" instead of the center of the swept circle, and because you chose 3: as the diameter of the circle, should I lower the top by the radius (1.5") or is there a better way of ensuring the total height is exactly 48"
Good video. I really enjoy your teaching. Im new in CAD, i want to ask. I notice in the final form of the desain, there is black line that separate each line that you sketch. Is that okay? Or do you have solution to make that sweep become like one solid object? Thank you.
When I get to where you finish "Sketch 1" at around 6:56 in the video, I can't move on because it says 'Sketch 1 is not fully defined". There are no blue segments left and everything seems fully constrained. I have started over several times but can't figure it out.
Thank you! Instead of a single circle for the profile, you can sketch 2 circles, and select the area between the circles for the profile in the Sweep window.
So I noticed that the construction line is still tied to the center line of the pipe. Is there a way to make the overall height to be 48” or would I just have to make the dimension 46.5” to the construction line knowing that the radius of the pipe would be going above that construction line?
Good observation! One way to do it would be to use Offset to create an offset construction curve at the top there, with the radius of the pipe, then make the horizontal construction line tangent to that instead.
How do you trace a picture and then extrude it? I haven’t figured it out. The picture has to be precise to do this. I’m trying to reverse engineer a missing part from a machine
What kind of image file are you using? By sideways, do you mean rotated 90 degrees? If you use the Transform button, you should be able to rotate the image inside the sketch permanently. The Transform button is sometimes hidden in a drop down list under the Linear Pattern button. Once you click Transform, select a border line or point of the image, and an image manipulator will appear. at the corner. Rotate the image by click-and-dragging the circle with the line through it. Left-click to accept. Hope this helps.
I started onshape 2 years ago and lost hope. Thank you for these tutorials, I'm learning a lot!
Thank you so much for these
Clear and concise
Was losing hope on learning in retirement
Learned to draw in 1970s by hand but was never an office worker
This is inspiring me
It's more detailed than the tutorial on their official website. I like it very much. Thank you.
I appreciate how helpful and unambiguous these sessions are! I have made a collection of handy items in Onshape as a result and the resulting 3D prints are so pro-looking!
Fantastic tutorial! I love how you go out of your way to teach us helpful commands!
Love your videos! Thanks for taking your time to bring us videos that are so easy to learn.
Good to hear they're helpful, thanks for watching!
I am always impressed by your teaching style. You have a true gift for teaching. One question though. The construction line you placed at 48" is in the CENTER of the extruded circle. But if I wanted the top of the drawing to equal 48" instead of the center of the swept circle, and because you chose 3: as the diameter of the circle, should I lower the top by the radius (1.5") or is there a better way of ensuring the total height is exactly 48"
Thank you for this video it is really helpful during this pandemic where everything is online
Another video that is spot-on for what I was looking for. Thanks
This is amazing, so well explained, thanks
This is so clear. Thank you!
Good video. I really enjoy your teaching.
Im new in CAD, i want to ask.
I notice in the final form of the desain, there is black line that separate each line that you sketch. Is that okay?
Or do you have solution to make that sweep become like one solid object?
Thank you.
When I get to where you finish "Sketch 1" at around 6:56 in the video, I can't move on because it says 'Sketch 1 is not fully defined". There are no blue segments left and everything seems fully constrained. I have started over several times but can't figure it out.
thanks you are a great teacher
You are welcome!
Great job. Thank you
Great tutorial man!
awesome video
Thank you.
Usually these tubes are hollow. How to make them hollow, with a wall thickness of 0.5in? Your tutorials are excellent.
Thank you! Instead of a single circle for the profile, you can sketch 2 circles, and select the area between the circles for the profile in the Sweep window.
So I noticed that the construction line is still tied to the center line of the pipe. Is there a way to make the overall height to be 48” or would I just have to make the dimension 46.5” to the construction line knowing that the radius of the pipe would be going above that construction line?
Good observation! One way to do it would be to use Offset to create an offset construction curve at the top there, with the radius of the pipe, then make the horizontal construction line tangent to that instead.
Can we apply photo match feature like in sketchup.
How do you trace a picture and then extrude it? I haven’t figured it out. The picture has to be precise to do this. I’m trying to reverse engineer a missing part from a machine
check teching tech is has a pretty good video for that.
I can’t drag segments
thank u so much
every time i insert an image its sideways. then i edited the image sideways to correct it and its still sideways.... help?
What kind of image file are you using? By sideways, do you mean rotated 90 degrees?
If you use the Transform button, you should be able to rotate the image inside the sketch permanently. The Transform button is sometimes hidden in a drop down list under the Linear Pattern button.
Once you click Transform, select a border line or point of the image, and an image manipulator will appear. at the corner. Rotate the image by click-and-dragging the circle with the line through it. Left-click to accept.
Hope this helps.
P
this is old and outdated... take it down