An interesting thing I've found through my own experimentation is that wrapping PLA parts in aluminum tape can do a surprisingly good job of protecting them from heat. I've got the ducts for my part cooler set up using that and between the tape on the outside and the cool air flowing through them, I haven't seen any sagging at all. Yet another part slightly further away that I didn't put the tape on ended up drooping after only several hours total print time. Of course this only protects against radiative heat loads but it's a neat trick that seems to work so far for me. Sometime I should do some tests to see how well it works in a more scientific fashion...
@3:35 When you import that step file, you can choose the composite part option (bottom check box) to have it import any assembly step files as if it was 1 part. Very useful for parts like that fan which have multiple bodies, but as far as we're concerned are more useful as a single part. Then when you derive it afterwards, you don't need to transform anything and it will be ready to go
May be one of the only non-positive reviews. In the future, don't be afraid to be slightly more verbose and go step-by-step, or assert critical areas. I feel like I had a really good grasp on things from your last video and then came into this one just lost. You start your sketching with the sketch already complete on the back of the fan. I was honestly confused at how to fully constrain that sketch and it took an hour. Kinda killed the flow. EDIT: Finally finished this design and it likely took me 6-7 hours. Particularly had a weird bug where the first sketch did not create a new part and instead is part of the imported part. You also mention at 9:27 to clean up the extra vertex, but mine was at a different location. Would have been helpful to show what the "Connections" checkbox does to troubleshoot.
retired engineer here with a a short bits of advice on ducts and airflow WRT printers, cuz I see a lot of mistakes being made in the 3DP community: 1. muffin fans do not have pressure capability, meaning they can't push against ANY resistance at all. So the slightest restriction, bend, friction, or reduction in cross section in any duct connected to a muffin fan will utterly destroy that fan's airflow. That especially means 4in flexible drier hose. 2. the air coming OUT of a muffin fan exits in a hollow, wide CONE SHAPE, coming out at roughly a 45º angle. These fans are intended to exhaust into free air through a circular wire finger guard. Ducts which connect straight to the fan edges, even if wide open, force the air to bend, and that slows it down. So if you must use a duct with a muffin fan, one with a bit of a double curve - first outward, then back inward - at the exit surface (requires a bulge much larger than 120mm on a 120mm fan) will help this problem a lot, but it uses more filament, and it's larger. Grills (finger guards) with any square edges at all, or rough surfaces, or non-circular shapes, will dramatically hamper air flow. Why circular? The air coming out is rotating too. Use circular wire grills, they're cheap. Use muffin fans to PULL air, not to PUSH air. 3. If the ability to work against resistance (a long duct, or flexible hose with uneven surfaces such as "drier duct") or bends or other restrictions, use a blower. A blower is not a fan and a fan is not a blower. Blowers are designed to work against resistance.
Wow, I was just thinking about re-designing a new part cooling fan shroud for my old Craftbot 4M in Fusion360. I think I will give Onshape a try! Thanks for the awesome content, per usual.
I previously used F360 to design some, and while it does work, I had a lot of trouble getting the lofts to work well. The interface in Onshape seems much more approachable to a hobbyist.
Thanks! I have been useing Fusion 360. This is way easier and perfect for the utilitarian projects I normally do. Im quitting fusion and you saved me $300 on the renewal . Thanks for the valuable info. Ill buy lunch! ( this tip was for the OnShape recommendation and tutorials)
Ducts are the ideal topic for this video; loft and shell commands make short work of producing something close to what you need, and are great at fine-tuning the final design. My first experience of this was designing an extraction duct system for my bandsaw. It attaches magnetically to the underside of the table, and meanders past guides and brackets to a support where the vacuum system attaches. Very satisfying... it taught me a lot, and you have taught me some more today!
I like the new series, but wish you would cover all the steps in one video without the need to jump to older video. This might be fine for more advanced users who are familiar with other cad sw, but not for beginners like me. I realize you just want to build up on what we learnt last time, but even though the concepts are the same, it's hard to see how you got there (@4:53). I don't think this would add much length to the video.
Yes. I agree. This video just went too fast. I realize that he may be limited in length, but the part the duct fitted on (the fan bracket) needed step-by-step as well. It's a long ways from two rectangles of the tool holder to that mount
I generally love your videos. Except this one. I use F360, not an expert but I get by, so i have a decent working knowledge of parametric design but….. I feel like you went from “here is how you turn on a computer” to “now let’s use python to program my coffee pot to wake me up in the morning”. I was legitimately so lost before the halfway point of the video that I just closed the video and will wait for this series to be over. (I voted yes to wanting this series btw)
These instructions could've been a bit more detailed. I've been struggling to make this work, and even though I've had some success, I hit a roadblock here to my progress. This IMO really should've had a whole lesson just on modeling around objects. I'm gonna check out another tutorial and maybe swing back here later. Still love Onshape, probably gonna stick with it instead of Fusion 360. Thank you!
Hopefully you can find what you need. To keep the video concise I try to build on the previous videos. Sometimes people come in and wan to follow just one video to make a whole specific part, but these videos assume prior knowledge from earlier in the series. Not ideal but I figure it's better than each video being 30-60 minutes.
This lesson is exactly what I need but... I guess I need more practice making constrained sketches and complex geometry. I'll figure it out and come back and watch the rest and will leave tips that will hopefully help other please. I love the channel!@@TeachingTech
I was unable to complete the loft at 8:40 because the profile on sketch 3 had "inner loops", the inner square marked in red as the culprit, not sure what I did wrong at first but noticed OnShape uses the extruded part's edges as if they were part of the sketch so I tried redefining the plane of the sketch as normal plane instead of the part's face and it worked. This is not an issue in the video for some reason despite the edges I mentioned showing up too as far as I can't tell, don't know if it's a quirk of OnShape or just me being used to 360 and its own quirks. A small related suggestion: Being the second project in the series it would have been better to go into more details about how the platform sketches are defined, I had to figure out some of the reference points and geometry based on the very quick rundown on the video, so that's likely the source of my problem.
@@solish3458 thank you, I worked around it by redefining the sketch plane a couple times but now that I'm more familiar with OnShape I think that's probably what happened (for anyone else reading this, keep in mind you can specifically select the sketch in the Features list instead of clicking on its profiles). Also sketch "imprinting" kept biting me throughout the tutorial series, so disabling it might have helped too.
I use on shape and found your first video very basic and was easy to follow but your second was straight into ducts and at the beginning you skipped over a lot and even though I understood most of it and could muddle my way through it would have been helpful to do it as a full step by step for the first three or four videos instead of " look at this video or that video" so people can follow along and try it out making it a more fun and smoother experience
Im lost at trying to work out how to use the right toold to get the extrusion around the exhaust. You dont mention snapped and aligning in the other tutorial. @6:49 How does width of the point work?
I guess I just need to learn a little more patience. I'd decided to start following your last video and design a pegboard holder for sharpies. Worked through the main part of the body in a couple hours, mainly by brute forcing it. Then proceeded to absolutely slam my head against the wall for the better part of two days trying to figure out how to make the top pegs curved. Excellent work as always, boss, and can't wait to see the rest of the videos in this series.
Jesus you say the steps we need to do, but you skip them in the video, making us looking for the item and selections you made. I'm trying to learn how to make my own 3d parts to print, but when you skip those step it makes hard to follow your guides
I understand your frustration but this is a series. Each new episode assumes you have completed the earlier ones. And it has to be this way or each new video would be longer and longer.
OK. I'm lost already. I have a box that's extruded next to another box. I want the boxes on top of each other. The way to move an object IS NOT obvious. Where is the move object tool or the align tool?😡
I "figured it out" and it is TOTALLY unintuitive. You have to click on "transform" even though you are not transforming anything, just moving. You then have to select a point ON THE OTHER OBJECT. You then tell it by distance. Then choose a random distance, then change the distance different amounts until you get it lined up. Then click the green check to stop moving. I'll stick with this series but it and OnShape are "On-The-Bubble". As a complete beginner, TinkerCad's click and drag without the weird and randomly named tools is superior.
I just started using Onshape and love it! I really appreciate you making videos that explain how to use the various features of the program. Very helpful!! Thank you!!
I was searching YT for a good tutorial on how to desing a fan duct, you cut straight to the point! Now I just need to apply the same techniques on F360 where I'm more used to. Thank you so much for all of what you make for the 3D Printing community!
Grabcad is top notch i many times need a part of a project and i go there and look for a final version or something like that, i get just the part that i need 100% recommend
Making molds is fairly simple. Make your part, then make a large box that covers them, then use the Boolean tool to subtract your part from the box. You now have a box with an empty volume in the shape of your part. However, there's more to making a mold that isn't so much about CAD as it is about making molds. Check out Robert Tolone whose channel is full of examples of making molds with some great insights into the process. It takes some practice, but you can do it in your garage with some easily available tools.
Pro tip: u can actually use an STL, but not edit it as u might think, the easiest way to use it is as a reference, so u can copy the shape and the hole position
This is nice and all, but to get this "free" version, they are "requiring" too much PERSONAL info! I don't mind using a fake name and a special email that I use for just this sort of thing, but when they INSIST on having a PERSONAL PHONE NUMBER, that's where I draw the line. Especially on a website that I'm not familiar with.
I really like this series you are making, Michael. I usually watch your videos because you have interesting content but in this case I was actually strugling with the limitations of my 3d design software (Tinkercad+freecad+OpenSCAD) and what you've shown so far covers exactly the kind of things that are experience changing when switching to an unknown (for me) new software like OnShape. Thank you very much. I already redesigned my 3d printer from scratch and this few days I've been finding new ways to improve on my designs with onshape and your tutorials. Cheers from Argentina, mate.
Go with whatever you like. I use Fusion 360 today but I find it cumbersome for the simpler things I generally work on. I'm going to start using Onshape from now on.
Plz help! I have a Neptune 2s, I’m very familiar with 3D printing btw, I have elephants foot that won’t go away and whenever I try printing a calibration cube for walls I can’t get anything lower than .81-2 (two walls). I have perfect e steps but flow doesn’t seem to change. I went from 100% and walls are .83-4 to 70% .81-2. I feel like I’m missing something or do I just keep taking flow down?
I would really like to buy a new 3D printer, which one do you recommend? I could spend like 600-900 dlls, do you have a ranking of the better 3D printers in the market? Avoiding Resin
I find it regrettable that you've chosen Onshape for your wonderfully made tutorials given their weird licensing... Doubly so when their cheapest full plan is $1,500 a seat and basically the whole planet is in a recession. Again - I love your work, I just wish you'd picked software that lets us control how our work is licensed without paying over a hundred dollars each month.
Is there any hobby level printing of automotive electrical connectors? I have heard of Nissan partnering with a company to make some for older tuner cars. Electrical connectors can get really pricey (60+ usd) when they no longer have high production volumes. And all the really hard to print stuff is mostly standardized, like the metal electrical pins and the weather seals. In fact, the sizes and shapes are also mostly standard but there are thousands of combinations of size, shape, pin count, pin configuration and bumps/fins. The latter two is a big problem because they are designed to keep you from put the wrong plug in somewhere. Sorry for the rant, but I sell car parts and I hate telling my customers that "The connector will cost $60-80 and will arrive two days from now." I know I sound like a boomer, but in this day and age, I shouldn't have to say that. We have the technology and the resources to do better than that.
Are you allowed profit on designs and prints you make in OnShape via RU-vid monetization? Wasn’t this the problem Thomas Sanladerer had with OnShape all those years ago? Here is his video, has something changed since then? ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-S9hmi1leU2s.html
This is awesome! Man, i am learning how to design (and made some successful models) are going to enjoy this. I want to make a better duct than the one i designed and that i cant support in the way i made it. But with this, now i can! I was using tinkercad, great for a lot of things but not for complex models
Thank you for the great videos. I think I’ve watched all of them multiple times. Did the duct print without supports? Because the way it is lying on the bed, there is a 90 degree overhang for the top.
Definitely learned some extra functionality of lofts and the pull face tool in this one Also how the heck am I not subscribed yet...was*..was I not subscribed yet Keepo
Windows released an update, that broke ports. which means I can't run my 3-D printer tethered without it messing with my computer. Do you have a solution?
Nicely done! We get used to clicking icons at the top of our applications but when you confront a group of icons that have no meaning it is a bit of an awkward journey. This explained a lot. There is always a progammer's paradigm that you must adapt to be successful. I remember when Photoshop came out with its similar icons to Windows tat did very different things - that was a bit of a transition. It was like having to unlearn how to tie your shoes. That said, the 3D world is coming on strong. ime for a new learning curve!
The nice thing about parametric design is that different programs have similar workflows. I am sure I use the program I use, Freecad, to design these parts instead.
I am designing ducts to replace fog lights in my car and connect to brake cooling hoses. I am lofting between rectangular opening and round outlet. My trouble is I want to add flanges that would intersect the duct body on the lofted shape. In other words between the two ends of the loft. I can make a flange that intersect one face of the loft but I can't figure out a way to make the flange wrap around the loft. The loft is tapered and I want the flange to smoothly transition into the loft. Wrap tool only works on one face, Boolean command fails, use command works but I can't merge the flange to lofted body in order to create a fillet between flange and lofted shape. Any advice?
After loading the fan part I click on the folder which I have named Ducts and the axis page is loaded but I dont have the same icons across the top and cant find how to display them so I can choose derived, you dont explain how you are choosing this page and that particular toolbar, I am stuck
Can Onshape do internal and external threads? I have been beating my head against the wall with other 3d programs to make vacuum hose internal and external hose fittings.
but how to add slats within the duct? for example, in this blower duct you modeled here, what if you want the end opening to be larger, with a couple of slats to direct the air more equally along the new width? and what if you want the slats to begin at points halfway down the duct?
Great video. I really appreciate the detailed examples for OnShape. I design and print a lot of accessories parts for our drones using knowledge from your channel. Thank you!
I want to get into 3D printing. And this is one of the things I wanted to do. I'd use this stuff to help flow air to the Nitro engines to help cool them better.
Dude, you blew my mind a couple times with this tutorial. Thanks for the education! I'm excited to try these moves out on my new OnShape account. Cheers from Wisconsin, USA! 🍻
3:28 When I tried this I got this message from onshape: “Translation not supported. (Zip file) was not translated. Translation is not supported for STEP (.stp) files. Can anyone help? It’s the same exact file as used in the video
SHELL!!! Good grief. I've been spending all this time making two intersecting lofts, then Boolean to hollow out the larger one. This is so much easier. Thank you!
Same here in Fusion 360, and often running into issues where the walls won't maintain proper thickness. I suppose it gives you more control to do it that way, but the Shell command is much simpler, especially if you want a constant thickness wall.
Michael, I've been fighting FreeCAD for months. (I'm used to AutoCAD), and OnShape is my new modeler for sure. Thank you for all the time it took to make these.
I have 3 3D printers and I've printed some useful things for them, but you've just made me realize I can solve my horrible dryer vent connection. It keeps detaching as I push the dryer back in place. Which this tutorial I can design a coupler to stop it from moving. This will go a long way to stopping the buildup of lint.
This video is amazing and taught me (who learned on traditional 2D CAD decades ago) so much that I have been struggling to figure out in OnShape. Great tutorial, man.
Ahhh Yes a Duct tutorial, everytime i need to a new duct i need to ask someone to help out. Thank you TT I use Fusion360 but nothing prevents the use of different programs
I converted to OnShape at the start of the year after my Solidworks licence expired. I've been very happy with it and running it on an old gaming laptop doesn't slow it down compared to Solidworks.