this post was submitted on 11 Nov 2024
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So, I'm trying to print some older models from thingiverse and I have discovered that basically all the files I want to print have glaring flaws in them.

Internal free floating structures, connector pieces and holes that are the exact same size... So on and so forth...

Do I need to learn a software like CAD or Blender to fix these? I seem to be able to do some basic stuff in Orca Slicer but it honestly seems like as much of a pain to modify the parts there as it would be to use a real software.

Is there one that's easier? I think I messed around with SketchUp once upon a time.

I am worried this feels like opening a can of worms just so that I can make a thing that already exists in a dozen forms better.

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[–] [email protected] 5 points 6 days ago (14 children)

So many CADs.

I grabbed FreeCAD but it made no sense to me.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 6 days ago (6 children)

So, FreeCAD. It's a beautiful hot mess. There's a 1.0 in beta right now that's bringing some much needed changes.

FreeCAD has a lot of parallel capabilities; it has an architectural workbench for drawing buildings, a Drafting workbench for more traditional 2D drawing, the Part workbench for a weird kind of boolean approach, and the Part Design workbench for a more typical sketch-and-extrude parametric modeling workflow like Fusion360, Inventor or OnShape.

The workflow is you create a sketch and draw a 2D shape, and then extrude (FreeCAD uses the word Pad) it into 3D space, then you can draw further features on that to design the shape you want.

The basis of how it works is somewhat unintuitive at first. "Parametric" means you draw using rules. There's a piece of software out there called OpenSCAD that is a very pure implementation of this because you "draw" by typing code in a kind of programming language. FreeCAD lets you represent rules by drawing things with the mouse. Rules like "this is a straight line. It is parallel to the X axis. It is 5cm long. The leftmost endpoint is 3cm from the X axis and 4cm from the Y axis." There's only one way to draw that line. Those rules may be called Constraints or Dimensions. The powerful part is you can later change one of the rules, like "Did I say 3cm from the X axis? I meant 4cm" and it'll redraw the whole part for you. Get your head around that concept and CAD software will unlock.

The UIs are different, but the general concepts are similar for FreeCAD, OnShape and Fusion360, sometimes tutorials for one will be useful for learning the others.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 6 days ago (5 children)

Oh man I wanted to mention Ondsel but I just saw that they’ve shut down and it really bummed me out…

[–] [email protected] 4 points 6 days ago (2 children)
[–] [email protected] 8 points 6 days ago

They just announced it a week or two ago, but they're keeping the server up for "a reasonable period" to allow users to migrate. From my understanding, many of their tweaks have been integrated into 1.0 and the team all plans to continue working with FreeCAD and submitting improvements.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 days ago

All of their changes will be merged to freecad 1.0 apparently outside of a few UI changes that will be add-in options.

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