Hi Steve,
> I did not mention anyone else, please show me where I did!
You said that the result generated "may be OK for hobby stuff" - however, the result that I posted would be ok for a lot of different purposes, like someone more focused on just quickly getting a model for rendering, or for some design like a piece of jewelry that does not have to be exactly tubular to a tight tolerance, or a ton of different things.
Your statement is basically placing all these other kinds of people's work as just "hobby stuff", even though what they are producing is actually a part of their real job, it's just different from your job.
Of course, I can certainly understand if MoI is not the right tool for your job, if you have specialized requirements then use specialized tools.
> Why did you post the example
> (
http://moi3d.com/forum/index.php?webtag=MOI&msg=3575.4)
> I was replying to (and I though we where discussing), and then
> not post an example showing a good result with you method?
Well, there were various different parts to the discussion earlier in this thread, that particular one I was giving an example of how you can't actually have a completely even thickness tube that has a common miter-like joint between 2 pieces that are curving around all over in 3D.
> The first rail/profile posted can easily be done with the various
> CAD systems I use, even Rhino can give a good\usable result
> with 5 mouse clicks.
One that matches your definition of within tolerance and not the "oh-so-terrible" result from sweeping between angled profiles?
If so then by all means show it.
If you do a regular 1-rail sweep in Rhino it will produce this result:
If you enable the "Untrimmed miters" option, then it will produce this result:
Note from the slanted isoparms there, that this is a sweep between angled profile curves, which is the kind of result that you had earlier said was totally unacceptable.
Is it suddenly acceptable now?
- Michael