Congratulations on the videos, I learned a lot. I have difficulties with autocad 3D. I know Fusion, Inventor and Solidworks. But at the moment I'm teaching Autocad 3D. I live in Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Altair, I too find AutoCAD 3D difficult to use as compared to SolidWorks, but this lady is making it much easier for me to understand and hopefully soon I will be able to draw the pictures my part time job will soon need.
Why do you keep moving the Z-axis for certain tasks? I can follow along, but I didn't get an explanation why this is necessary. Seems like you could draw and extrude in any direction you choose, right?
In AutoCAD 3D, drawing on the XY plane is a common practice because it simplifies the modeling process and aligns with the standard Cartesian coordinate system. The XY plane is the horizontal plane in a three-dimensional space, where the X-axis represents the horizontal direction, the Y-axis represents the vertical direction, and the Z-axis represents the depth or elevation. Drawing on the XY plane makes it easier to create 3D models with consistent and predictable geometry. It also aligns with traditional drafting conventions, making it more intuitive for users who are accustomed to working in two dimensions. While drawing on the XY plane is a common starting point, AutoCAD 3D provides tools and commands that allow you to create objects in any orientation or on any plane within the 3D space. You can use commands like "UCS" (User Coordinate System) to define custom coordinate systems and draw in different planes. In summary, starting with the XY plane in AutoCAD 3D is a practical and conventional approach, but the software offers flexibility to work in other planes and orientations as needed for your specific design requirements.
@@AC3DCad Appreciate the detailed reply. I suppose the simplest answer is just "personal preference?" I can see why people would want to draw on the XY plane any time they draw a 2D shape. I just wanted to make sure there wasn't some other reason that might make my life insanely difficult down the road if I don't adopt this approach. For instance, in your drawing if I just viewed from the RIGHT side and drew the circles in the YZ plane, there is no harm in that, right? May not be conventional or standard, but it will still draw a circle that can be extruded. Just making sure. One thing I did notice about the UCS is that when you finish a drawing and are ready to make an ISO sheet or something, it is very helpful to reset the UCS to the view that you want to be the front and which end is "up." Thanks for the very informative videos and discussion!
When the dynamic UCS (located at the status bar) is turned on, you can draw on a 3D object's face dynamically, meaning, without rotating the UCS. You can see it when you hover over a face, it is highlighted (blue color)
Do you make the 2D from same assembly ..like hows the given 2d drawing ? Provided to left on screen. Complete layout of full assembly for export work into pdf !!!
yes, you can generate 2D from 3D by using layout command. It will be a whole new different video. You can see the detailed dimensions through this link of my website autocadnetwork.blogspot.ca/2018/03/mechanical-modeling-tutorial-in-autocad.html
when you extrude upward the lines stays at the bottom and cannot be seen unless you change your drawing to wireframe or xray , then you have to move it upward and attach the line on the top surface. To avoid doing it or to save time , just extrude it downward
i have a question please , if i have some items which i need to deal with them by selection many times is it possible to make them a group so i can mention this group whenever i want instead of selecting them again one by one
@@AC3DCad okay so I am trying to learn if you can help I can send you my files so you can see for your self I have the autoCAD mechanical version and is kind of complicated to create the gap were the screw driver drives the screw and to make a solid screw as well I have build the whole skeleton of it but I can't join the circle where the gap is to the shape of the cross gap to surftrim or trim or substract the cross gap my email is hectorquezada21@gmail.com thanks for the vids
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I would say: "The best tutorial I have ever seen. So simplified & well explained!!!"
Thanks for watching and subscribing
Wow. One of the best tutorial I have ever seen. So simplified & well explained.
thanks for watching and subscribing
Thanks for your lesson. Hi from Ukraine!
The queen of cad🎉🎉
I shared this video on my Facebook. thumbs up
I appreciate that
That's really fun to watch this video.
The explanation was very understandable.
Thank you from Iran
Thank you for this video, after watching it I'm going to use MIRROR function more often :)
Glad it was helpful!
you saved my day thankyou keep it up its so informative and full of short cut method I really appreciate it thank you soo muh
Thank you for your great work.
Thanks
Congratulations on the videos, I learned a lot. I have difficulties with autocad 3D. I know Fusion, Inventor and Solidworks. But at the moment I'm teaching Autocad 3D. I live in Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Thanks for subscribing. It is my pleasure
Altair, I too find AutoCAD 3D difficult to use as compared to SolidWorks, but this lady is making it much easier for me to understand and hopefully soon I will be able to draw the pictures my part time job will soon need.
Thank u mam for this video...use full..it is use full for ....me... thank u...
Welcome 😊
Love the way you did it
thanks for the encouraging comment. thanks for subscribing
Awesome and easy to understand... really Appreciable work ....
Many thanks...
That was really awesome, well illustrated and smooth to understand.
I appreciate your comment
thank you for these tutorials. Help me very much. I understand a lot of things.
It is my pleasure, thanks for subscribing
Great video!
Thanks for subscribing
Why do you keep moving the Z-axis for certain tasks? I can follow along, but I didn't get an explanation why this is necessary. Seems like you could draw and extrude in any direction you choose, right?
In AutoCAD 3D, drawing on the XY plane is a common practice because it simplifies the modeling process and aligns with the standard Cartesian coordinate system. The XY plane is the horizontal plane in a three-dimensional space, where the X-axis represents the horizontal direction, the Y-axis represents the vertical direction, and the Z-axis represents the depth or elevation.
Drawing on the XY plane makes it easier to create 3D models with consistent and predictable geometry. It also aligns with traditional drafting conventions, making it more intuitive for users who are accustomed to working in two dimensions.
While drawing on the XY plane is a common starting point, AutoCAD 3D provides tools and commands that allow you to create objects in any orientation or on any plane within the 3D space. You can use commands like "UCS" (User Coordinate System) to define custom coordinate systems and draw in different planes.
In summary, starting with the XY plane in AutoCAD 3D is a practical and conventional approach, but the software offers flexibility to work in other planes and orientations as needed for your specific design requirements.
@@AC3DCad Appreciate the detailed reply. I suppose the simplest answer is just "personal preference?" I can see why people would want to draw on the XY plane any time they draw a 2D shape. I just wanted to make sure there wasn't some other reason that might make my life insanely difficult down the road if I don't adopt this approach. For instance, in your drawing if I just viewed from the RIGHT side and drew the circles in the YZ plane, there is no harm in that, right? May not be conventional or standard, but it will still draw a circle that can be extruded. Just making sure. One thing I did notice about the UCS is that when you finish a drawing and are ready to make an ISO sheet or something, it is very helpful to reset the UCS to the view that you want to be the front and which end is "up." Thanks for the very informative videos and discussion!
When the dynamic UCS (located at the status bar) is turned on, you can draw on a 3D object's face dynamically, meaning, without rotating the UCS. You can see it when you hover over a face, it is highlighted (blue color)
If you can't find it, click the customization button at the status bar where you can find the Dynamic UCS.
Amazing and simple work. It is very helpful. Thank you 🙏 so much for your work
thanks for watching. It is my pleasure
Perfect Tutorial.... Thank you Very Much :) You Helped me a lot
thank you so much and thanks for subscribing
very helpful series, has helped me learn quickly
I am glad it helped you
really a good one ..
easy to understand
thanks for watching
Thank u for this video mam.
thanks
Do you make the 2D from same assembly ..like hows the given 2d drawing ? Provided to left on screen.
Complete layout of full assembly for export work into pdf !!!
yes, you can generate 2D from 3D by using layout command. It will be a whole new different video. You can see the detailed dimensions through this link of my website autocadnetwork.blogspot.ca/2018/03/mechanical-modeling-tutorial-in-autocad.html
AC 3DCad
ohh ... thank you so much for the reply ...
@Parveen Cad I just subscribed
Thank you very much mam, Its easy to learn this. keep adding new designs, specially related to turbine blades.
my pleasure
somesh verma thank you .how can I download the programشكرا جزيلا
go to www.autodesk.com/community if you have a student ID you can use it for a year or so
you're the best
thanks for subscribing
Great job
how can i install auto card my computer
When I extrude the first time, all the lines I created inside the box disappear!!! :@. So frustrating even though I did all you did
try extruding it downward not upward
when you extrude upward the lines stays at the bottom and cannot be seen unless you change your drawing to wireframe or xray , then you have to move it upward and attach the line on the top surface. To avoid doing it or to save time , just extrude it downward
so you build all the parts in one file?
V-BLOCK & CLAMP
very nice tutorial..
i have some question ...
1: kindly tell me your pc specs and gpu ?
www.msi.com/Laptop/support/gp70-2qf-leopard-pro
What drawing is it?
i have a question please , if i have some items which i need to deal with them by selection many times is it possible to make them a group so i can mention this group whenever i want instead of selecting them again one by one
yes you can group the items and the group can be edited too like undo group or add more items to that group another option is to create blocks
can you please tell me the command ?
select group tool from the group panel ribbon, and for creating blocks, just type the command block or wblock
sorry that i asked many questions
ask as many questions as you need to. I appreciate questions
Wow, you're amazing
Thanks
thnx very helpful
Glad to hear that
Good Job!
thanks for watching
Great
Thanks very informative
my pleasure, thanks for watching
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Okay lady I'm about to jump out of a bridge because I can't do a screw CAD a screw its unreal
What screw? Pls ask a specific question. I'll try to help
@@AC3DCad okay so I am trying to learn if you can help I can send you my files so you can see for your self I have the autoCAD mechanical version and is kind of complicated to create the gap were the screw driver drives the screw and to make a solid screw as well I have build the whole skeleton of it but I can't join the circle where the gap is to the shape of the cross gap to surftrim or trim or substract the cross gap my email is hectorquezada21@gmail.com thanks for the vids
Obrigado!