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#1 |
Junior Member
Junior member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Midwest
Posts: 6
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I thought I would post a site of my Electrical parts I created with AC3D
They are at www.nuix.ws under Cad Models I hope You Enjoy |
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#2 |
Junior Member
Junior member
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Norway
Posts: 9
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That's quite a pile of components! Now I just need a robot and some machinery to build actual physical circuits for me. AC3D v5.0 feature request: add "submit to factory" button - get a real-world "copy" of your model with the click of a mouse.
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#3 |
Junior Member
Junior member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Midwest
Posts: 6
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Now that would be quite a button. I actually have used ac3d on top of a cam tool for pcbs and model my products as trial baloons. It works quite good. Our company is actually making a low cost 3d digitizer arm which will interface with AC3D as well as many other 3d packages. So you will at least have a press a button and input a part
![]() take care Sorry for the delay I just got back from vacation. |
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#4 |
Senior Member
Professional user
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Homje of the Indy 500
Posts: 176
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You know that's not too far fetched. Already there is a ( forget what you call it ) machine that can do that in a type of polymer plastic. It reads a 3d model file and feeds the information to this machine which then uses a laser to trace out the object in a bath of liquid plastic. Wherever the laser hits, it solidifies the plastic
Some R&D companies do that to test out new design ideas. I saw a program about it a long time ago. They created a prototype of a carburetor that they were testing. After it was done, it just raised up out of the plastic in some type of wire basket. |
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#5 |
Junior Member
Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 23
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i would settle for a DWIM key. any chance of getting that added to the tool?
![]() //DWIM - Do What I Mean
__________________
It\'s almost impossible to overestimate the unimportance of most things. |
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#6 |
Junior Member
Junior member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Midwest
Posts: 6
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In reguards to woody's comment, we will be releasing a digital input arm which will be around $120 and interface via a USB. It will hold a value of .01". Hopefully for the graphic artists out there and the game designers that will be enough to get physical models into a work enviroment where it can be modeled. For most people the cost of $4000 for a digital input device is just crazy. That arm is now coming into production and a desktop milling machine is now exiting our testing phase of prototpying.
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#7 |
Senior Member
Professional user
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Homje of the Indy 500
Posts: 176
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That kind of stuff just fascinates me. I bet someday we'll be able to build our own computers right from our desktop. Today's fantasies are tomorrow's realities.
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#8 |
Junior Member
Junior member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Midwest
Posts: 6
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Yes, But that is the reality today, what would be the goal is to ease the draw it, build it, use it. right from you desk into a solution.
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