TurboCAD – Alibre File Transfers.

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TurboCAD – Alibre File Transfers.

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  • #807257
    Nigel Graham 2
    Participant
      @nigelgraham2

      When I observed there is little about Fusion and SolidEdge “here” I meant on the Forum as a whole, not this thread.

      What I now observe on this thread is a lot of engineering using CAD, CNC, 3D-printing and the rest. Very impressive, I have great respect for its creators, but far beyond me.

      I can only work with the tools I have, including the one most important to all us of: own ability.

      I undertand my work-rounds may be “wrong”, but if the only way I can progress a project, what matters is that they work.

      If I could use either Alibre Atom or TurboCAD Deluxe properly I would use only that one. I took up Alibre because it appeared easier than TurboCAD for me to learn, and it is easier than TC’s 3D system. I found for me, Alibre’s 3D modelling and TurboCAD in 2D mode, of comparable difficulty, compounded by two aspects.

      The first is the project entailing designing complicated “works” from virtually no prior information.

      The second is my natural learning limit for any given subject. I am not a neuroscientist so can only guess it’s a matter of individual brain physicality.  I cannot advance in CAD to the level illustrated here. That’s not its fault, nor mine, because I cannot help it.

      .

      So my original question, transferring drawing files from system to system to enable me to design what I want to build, is to make the best of what I can do.

      .

      I have created Alibre part images for my engine but cannot assemble them properly in Alibre. Also I repeat, I am designing from scratch an engine whose original version is invisible! I have almost no original material beyond the overall appearance and size of the vehicle. Far less than anyone else here for their own projects.

      The gubbins in my wagon are all hidden in boxes, below superstructures, or deep in shadow and very difficult to interpret and scale. No drawings to copy; no full-size survivor to visit. The photographs show only partial exteriors whose details differ from photo to photo.

      So: while an orthographic general-arrangement in TurboCAD and part-drawings in either TurboCAD 2D or Alibre 3D is not the best way, it’s the only way I can do it.

      .

      Others can design something of similar complexity in just Alibre Atom: fine! I can only envy their skill. In the end what will count is I get the bloomin’ thing built and working – there is no guarantee it will. If I need overlap two CAD programmes because I cannot learn either of them fully, well, I can’t help that but at least I attempt the thing.

       

      I am NOT trying to put anyone off CAD, or any particular CAD make, as I see I was accused of doing.

      I cannot learn Matrices or the pianoforte either – but others do, and even become professional Finite-Element Analysts or performers of Rachmaninov concerti.

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      #807272
      JasonB
      Moderator
        @jasonb

         I have almost no original material beyond the overall appearance and size of the vehicle. Far less than anyone else here for their own projects.

        Suggest you read my previous post again, a fag packet sketch is a lot less material than you have to go on.

        #807300
        John Hinkley
        Participant
          @johnhinkley26699

          Nigel,

          You are no more “in the dark” with your lack of basic information about the vehicle of which you are making a model than the original designer(s) of the lorry itself were.  They had no drawings or dimensions to manufacture from, either, just an idea of what their end goal would look like and how large it could or should be.

          If someone asked you to build, say, a table, you might just go ahead and screw some pieces of wood together and achieve a passable result.  More likely, I suggest, you would sit down and make a drawing of what the finished product should look like.  Would you then plough straight in and try to carve it out of one massive piece of tree? No, of course not.  You would break it down into top and legs and then think about how to join them together.  The same applies to your lorry. Take it one assembly at a time and split that assembly into its constituent parts (analogous to Atom terminology) before bringing those parts into one finished assembly.

          Use the same approach to Atom and you can’t go far wrong, can you?

          I just re-read that and it sounds somewhat pretentious and condescending.  It’s not meant to come across that way and if it offends, then I apologise.

          John

           

          #807308
          Nigel Graham 2
          Participant
            @nigelgraham2

            John-

            Thankyou.

            Yes, I see that but those Edwardian designers had a lot of prior knowledge and experience, in a team of properly, apprentice-trained engineers. Their “Light Delivery Van” was their third or fourth vehicle. E.S. Hindley & Sons was already established, making a range of engineering products.  Their first steam-wagon was a spindly affair, with undertype engine and vertical boiler. They developed that experiment into their moderately successful “Standard” 5- and 7- ton undertype and its heavier-duty “Colonial” export variant.

            Then in 1908 intoduced this LDV with its vertical mid-engine – as far as I know, a unique arrangement – for 2-3 ton capacity.

            The only photograph I have that shows much of the engine is this one:

            The engine is that grey box between the seats. I know the bores and stroke but what valve-gear? What are those two pressed-steel bulges (motion-parts clearance??) capped with open elbows, on the “quickly detachable covers” as the original catalogue has it? Where is the reverser? Assuming the regulator being the globe-valve on the boiler, what is that valve with prominent lever on the off-side, HP end, near the driver’s shoulder in full-size, and working across the vehicle?

            The transmission is only thought to be 2-speed on this wagon (as we know it was on the Standards, with the gear-lever next to the rear wheel). How is it arranged? Where is its control lever?

            Where is the boiler feed-pump, invisible on all photographs?

            How does that brake work? On all the other photos it uses blocks drawn against the wheel rims.

            You see the problem…..

            I have to design something to fit a vague external outline; plus my naturally limited CAD skill enforces my peculiar work-round –  making the draughting possible but more difficult and cumbersome than it should be.

            At least when I need choose between the Myford and Harrison lathes for particular work, their operating is much the same. TurboCAD and Alibre are very different.

            I don’t have the skill to use either system for 3D assembly modelling; nor can I see how to use Alibre or similar when you have to design the Parts before you know the Assembly.

            So far I do have some engine parts made, and a library of Alibre 3D models of others. I think my best bet is to turn the Alibre models to Alibre elevation drawings, export those to TurboCAD and work exclusively in TurboCAD in orthographic mode.

            Using 3D-priority CAD is obviously easy for everyone else here, but a blind alley for me.

            HLDV0002

            #807311
            Nick Wheeler
            Participant
              @nickwheeler
              On Nigel Graham 2 Said:

              John-

              Thankyou.

              Yes, I see that but those Edwardian designers had a lot of prior knowledge and experience, in a team of properly, apprentice-trained engineers.

               

              The only photograph I have that shows much of the engine is this one:

              The engine is that grey box between the seats. I know the bores and stroke but what valve-gear? What are those two pressed-steel bulges (motion-parts clearance??) capped with open elbows, on the “quickly detachable covers” as the original catalogue has it? Where is the reverser? Assuming the regulator being the globe-valve on the boiler, what is that valve with prominent lever on the off-side, HP end, near the driver’s shoulder in full-size, and working across the vehicle?

              The transmission is only thought to be 2-speed on this wagon (as we know it was on the Standards, with the gear-lever next to the rear wheel). How is it arranged? Where is its control lever?

              Where is the boiler feed-pump, invisible on all photographs?

              How does that brake work? On all the other photos it uses blocks drawn against the wheel rims.

              You see the problem…..

              I have to design something to fit a vague external outline;

               

              No, I can’t see the problem. Have you considered that not having detailed descriptions of a well-known prototype makes your design work easier? It doesn’t have to match something lots of people know, because those people don’t exist. The few that might can’t prove that your work is wrong. Instead, design parts that work, fit within the structure and match the engineering of the time. That’s how the original builders did it; why can’t you? There’s lots of Edwardian machinery still about to give you ideas of how they would have connected a brake lever in the driving compartment to the actual brakes, or how any of the other components were supposed to work.

              #807312
              JasonB
              Moderator
                @jasonb

                Much like John says you start with a basic sketch just like you would do on a fag packet. Put a few simple shapes into a 2D sketch and a couple of basic sizes. Here I have just shown the chassis, engine, boiler, wheels and drive train with simple shapes. Anything can be altered at this stage.

                n fag 3

                You then start to produce some basic shapes by taking thos 2D boxes and circles and giving them some depth. Th enext stage is to start putting those shapes together, you can use the original 2D sketch to help place them if you want.

                n fag

                n fag 2

                You can still make changes, maybe the chain when it is added will clash with the tank, so alter the tank width/position.

                Then you start adding detail like the cylinder has and so on detailing wheels, chassis etc. There will be a lot of going back and forth making tweaks to an old part as newere ones are added but it is a lot better to do it on the screen than waste metal and workshop time.

                 

                 

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