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From: Michael Gibson
Hi Patrick, well that's very large from the standpoint of what the forum software is expecting to handle.
Can you please export a file with only the curves you were asking about above? That should be around 1/100 the size.
- Michael
From: propmaster (PWWHDR70)
Ok, got it.
A is the original solid. B is the finished one. I used Rebuild on the curved lines and Sweep to create the surface.
I had intended to use Flow and add knurling to the Filleted surface (see pic in OP), but I need a flattened version of that surface in order to use Flow. I'm not sure how to go about doing this.
Any help would be appreciated.
Patrick
Attachments:
Grip 2.3dm
From: Death
I think you are "overmodeling" this.
Just use a nice knurl texture and bump map when rendering it instead.
From: propmaster (PWWHDR70)
It's not for rendering. It's for 3D printing on Shapeways.
From: Michael Gibson
Hi Patrick, I'm not able to repeat the additional edge you got with Network. It could help for me to see what went wrong for you if I could get a file with only the curves in it that you used to make the Network.
Here's what I did with your posted file:
Selected these edges and used Edit > Join to glue them together into 2 independent curves:
Selected these edges and used Edit > Join again to make a single joined curve:
Selected this one edge and used Copy/paste (Ctrl+C/Ctrl+V) to duplicate it as a regular curve.
Selected these 2 curves and used Edit > Extend to make them come to a sharp point:
Selected these 2 curves and used Edit > Extend to make them also come to a sharp point:
Then these 4 curves can be selected:
And running Construct > Network gave me this:
It's not really necessary to do a separate Rebuild before doing Network (unless you need to use one of the other rebuild modes than "Refit" mode) , because Network itself already incorporates a rebuild in it anyway.
Now for doing the knurling it's pretty difficult to model knurling directly and I'd think you may need to make it further extended or else the knurling is going to follow these lines of the surface which will make them in curved lines:
Those are isocurves that I extracted from the surface.
You may need to build something that's extended more like this to avoid distortion:
Knurling like you show there is such a small sized feature I'm not sure you can get a good 3D print of it with the stepping resolution in a normal 3D printer.
Texture mapping may still be a better way to go, if you use a displacement texture map in a rendering program you can probably have it output triangulated mesh geometry which can then go to STL format. 3D-Coat and ZBrush may be good at applying this kind of displacement bumping too.
- Michael
Image Attachments:
patrick_network1.jpg
patrick_network2.jpg
patrick_network3.jpg
patrick_network4.jpg
patrick_network5.jpg
patrick_network6.jpg
patrick_network7.jpg
patrick_network8.jpg
patrick_network9.jpg
From: Michael Gibson
Hi Patrick, there's a tutorial here about using displacement texture mapping for 3D printing:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Zms6K9LxMQ
- Michael
From: Michael Gibson
And some other tutorials on texture mapping for 3D printing:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2841201
https://grabcad.com/tutorials/how-to-create-incredibly-complex-textured-shapes-for-3d-printing-using-bump-mapping
- Michael
From: Death
Bingo!
From: propmaster (PWWHDR70)
Thank you for helping. You've given me an idea on how to proceed in a different way. Gonna think on it for a bit.
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