3DPrinting
3DPrinting is a place where makers of all skill levels and walks of life can learn about and discuss 3D printing and development of 3D printed parts and devices.
The r/functionalprint community is now located at: or [email protected]
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No bigotry - including racism, sexism, ableism, homophobia, transphobia, or xenophobia.Β Code of Conduct.
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Is free as a good enough replacement? I like fusion for the sculpting mode as well. I would rather go to an open source replacement though
Freecad sucks. I use it exclusively and it sucks.
But it's the only foss option and the only Linux option.
It's the reason I jumped on a cheap solidworks license, was fully intending to use it as my primary cad package but I just found it kinda clunky. To be super fair, I recall using it years ago and it's come a long way and I run it on my lab machine because Linux, but even not touching cad programs for almost a decade solidworks was just way easier to come back to.
Nah freecad still sucks. Change anything deeper and nothing recomputes correctly.
This is a result of the topological naming problem. FreeCAD currently doesn't handle this well at all. There's been a lot of work on this front though - you can use realthunder's fork which should be a lot better in this regard. Alternatively, you can avoid creating features directly on top of other features, and instead make planes and reference them exclusively.
The trick for me is constant forced refreshes
Are you running solidworks on linux ?
I'm interested because I need CAD for my business, I'm running fusion 360 with in a VM ad paying for the license but I would like to move away from it.
Nah I'm not unfortunately, my desktop is running windows but everything else uses various flavours of debian.
I've noticed that as well. Closest would be blender, but that doesn't even work on my Linux computer. Because the graphics card or possibly a different card doesn't support it
Blender maybe can do some CAD, but its not CAD
Not sure about sculpting, but in terms of sketching I find it good but flawed.
Getting to grips with sketching and how you need to complete shapes, and using support lines is a learning curve.
However I find it quite rewarding and worth the time to learn.
I'm going to check it out again. It sounds more than decent for most things. Do you have any tutorials you learned from. The "learn fusion 360 in 30 days" is what I used to learn fusion
Not any that I found useful sadly :D, FreeCAD is mostly used by Engineers, so finding a coherent easy to understand tutorial isn't easy. I got the gyst with trial and error and watching people use FreeCAD.
3 Lessions which makes FreeCAD flow make sense.
For me this was what allowed me to understand how to use FreeCAD well enough to replace Fusion. Everything from what I've used thus far, is based on this hierarchy and order of operation.
thanks!
Thank you that helps