this post was submitted on 12 Nov 2023
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3DPrinting

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TLDR = what's a good next step after kid-friendly 3d creation tools?
Solved = Fusion360 is voted as winner, we even got a nice tutorial playlist.

Hi all - I'm still very much a new user. Highly skilled in IT but just getting my feet wet in 3D printing, since a month or so. I love the possibilities! I can physically create anything I can image, it's amazing.

So far, I've used mostly TinkerCad and done lots with it. The learning curve is practically non-existent, and it has sufficient features to do a lot.

But of course it's not perfect. Obvious example: can't do fillets, except in roundabout ways using negative blocks.

I've tried OnShape, OpenScad, Fusion 360, but found them quite a steep hill to climb.

Are these good choices, or is there something in-between that would make it easier for me to advance?

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[–] TootSweet 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I exclusively use OpenSCAD. (I've been known even to write Go code that outputs OpenSCAD code on occasion.) And it does require a good amount of just raw-dogging the trigonometry. You can do most things, but it definitely has its limitations.