Awesome advice on building your own basic rendering environment. It really is the difference between a blah rendering and something that can be published, put on a website, or given to a customer!
Really great tips Lars, thank you very much! I've been wasting time playing around with different environment setup to no avail. It was worth watching the whole 30mins (hesitated at first) LOL!
I never thought of making a staged environment using CAD & the appearance editor. Always figured I should find environments online. Great video Lars! Thanks for the tips!!
Which makes me wonder what the difference is between them. Autodesk alone has several products for design. I'm an absolute beginner, so i don't know what different uses they have.
That looks amazing. I tend to create models that look like the one at the beginning. Boring. I'm definitely going use your example to make the models pop when I present them. Thanks! Love the channel!!
I only use Fusion 360 for hobby use, and to keep my brain sharp. I just saw you on Linkedin and then figure hey.... Lars has to have done a render. Best part of video. I like how you say...More money. LOL.
So how does rendering helps when 3d printing? My printer has white filiment so when printing the object will be white no matter what correct. Also i been using tinkercad and i can do pretty much anything people do in fusion 360 right? One of the differences is rendering but how does that helps when printining?
Hi Marco, Not really. Rendering is way older than 3D printing and not really related. You can use rendering if you are designing a table, or a house, or a car, or what ever else you want to see in a virtual environment with real life appearance. Hope this helps
Hahaha... Well the locla rendering spikes CPU usage to 100%... So your live stream wouldn't have any compute left over to encode... You could set your process affinity for Fusion to not include some cores... Then have your streaming software use the Open cores.