Thank you this was for a project and school and this really taught me a lot and I manages to make the lego man with little experience in onshape thanks to your help!
Simply amazing! Really, believe me! I love onshape more than solidworks and I really like the way which you use to explain the matter. I hope you go ahead. It would be beautifull if you could do some examples using "in the context" concepts within assembly enviroment. Thanks to exist. bye
Hi Stefano, thanks for your comment, that really makes my day! I published this video where I model in-context: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-i2zvbK5M7Yg.html
I really wanna thank you twice for sharing your huge knowledge to everybody. You are a very trustworthy man. I confess you I watch agreeably your videos. That is a great present you have done me. I love "in the context designing". I wish... a good weekend for a special person. Bye Sorry, but now it is time to see again the video. 😊😊
Really good tutorials! Thank you! I am waiting my first 3d printer and has never use parametric cad/3d desing before. Littlebit diffrent world than Blender and other "Render oriented" programs
Sorry to hear that. compare with mine-I share a link with you of my lego man: cad.onshape.com/documents/520fb3bd400c2c80d9f08b74/w/2d8fc92554dc566f3189fea5/e/59b6dd04ccd9c6649659440a?renderMode=0&uiState=666ac53a1c65d142ed2b89e3
Hi Stefan, you need to limit the revolute mates to a 90 degree angle, define a gear relation between opposing joints and one more gear between shoulders and hips.