Me too. My freshman year I took intro to engineering, and it was basically a CAD class. I sucked at it, and I never really tried. I wish I stayed in the engineering course for my high school.
I'm preparing for a interview and one of the key words was CADD which I had no clue to what it was. I've watched a few different video's which gave good breakdowns but your process of going through step by step on how to make something as simple as this device gives me more than enough knowledge to be able to at least talk about the tool through the interview. Thank You for this video and the new found interest.
I couldn’t catch on to this teaching style but thanks for the effort. I guess I need cad for dummies . A slower and simplified approach but I’m 52 years old and have a harder time catching on than a lot of people would.
Nice! Im starting to play around in tinkercad but want to learn SketchUp. I'd love to see more of these types of videos as well as the fpv stuff. 😉 Thanks.
Just putting it out there for the people reading this: SketchUp is Not suitable for product design. You need a Parametric CAD program to accurately make and size your designs.
Thank you! You're right, it's just a very short tutorial, but I am a lot less intimidated now! Getting started seems a lot less overwhelming than I expected. I think this video is a great starting point for people who are interested in cad!
I found this video very interesting. I'm looking to get a 3d printer but have no ideal how to do it. This showed the basics to get started with CAD. Now I can get a base line on what to do. Deff wanna see more vids on 3d printing. Awesome job brotha 👍
thanks man. if you're getting a printer for casual printing and nothing heavy duty, a simple printer like this will work fine. set up right it will make great prints: amzn.to/2UXHmKg
That must be a good printer cause everyone is telling me to get the ENDER 3. There's alot of videos on RU-vid about it as well. So that's a good thing.
Awsome stuff man! I am trying to design a prototype for a product I have in mind and I have been debating whether or not to try to design it in cad software myself or resource out that part of the development process. After watching this, I think I should be able to do it myself and save money! Now I just need to buy a 3D printer haha
I think Fusion360 is free to use also for hobbyists so you don't have to be a registered student somewhere to use it. Also, I've been using Tinkercad for everything I've needed and so far I haven't felt too limited to motivate a change. But eventually I will...
I have a tiny metal part (similiar to a tiny metal screwdriver) I'm trying to put into a cad drawing for manufacture. They said to save it in 2d, and 3d. Is there any way I can do this with my phone?
You stated CAD is about taking things away But can items start smalland be built on? Say you have an internal structure that that I would think would be easier to accomplish by creatined it first and building around it. Is that possible?
Awesome Would love to see a tutorial on cylinders and how to make them spin inside of a bigger cylinder. I’ve subscribed because you explain operations in an easy way of learning and comprehending. Keep up the great work. I’m a newbie. Lol
2:50 - TAKE NOT AMERICANS - //.... or '' twenty-five sixty-forths ''.... or '' seven sixteenths '' or ... '''nine fifty-eighths'' etc... ad nauseaum.... Great explanation - my real foray into CAD and 3D printing.... I'm here to learn. And that tutorial was a great place to start. Many thanks... ...And yes, please take us through the entire process of fabricating one of your aero-quad chassis or something .... With more details on the CAD aspect.