@@zeeshankhan-ir9ug There are not 3D planes, only 2D or 3D sketches. You always have to use a plane for 2D sketches (RECOMMENDED) or use a 3D sketch that doesn't need any planes. As a beginner, do NOT touch 3D sketches. Come on my website and watch the webinar, you need it, link in the description Zeeshan
I know how to use SOLIDWORKS. I already made several engineering designs. But i don't get the freelancing work. Can you help me to get freelance work. I will do the work and you can take your commission.
Watching your videos is my new morning routine at work since being given access to Solidworks. Out of the 20 or so different channels I've watched, your ability to teach and explain in simple terms far exceeds the others.
I have been teaching myself solid works for one and a half years. Your videos help help me out tremendously. It would really be great if you would continue this line of teaching on a regular basis to carry us all the way through to at least professional level. Thank you so much for your great style of teaching. However it would help if you could slow down your speech, as it would give us a little more time to absorb what you are saying. I’m sure we are in no hurry to skip over because we didn’t understand. Thank you so much keep up the good work
Lance, it was indeed constructive feedback I was looking for. Thank you for that. I would certainly reduce the pace of my speech in the next episode. Also, since it seems that you have been consistent with your learning I think you would really benefit from my 1 hour-ish webinar which covers the 10 common mistakes that you are most probably making on your day-to-day practice with SolidWorks. These mistakes are caused by the bad habits self-learners pick. And after that, you *get free access to my mini-course*. bit.ly/SolidWorksCoursePro101
I have learned SolidWorks 20 years ago when, there were no videos on it, just by running the software. It is so common sense, the software explains itself to you. SolidWorks has revolutionized CAD. And beat pro Engineer, that was the most used CAD at the time. But it was incredibly hard to learn! You needed to sift through the Pro. Engineer Bible to find what you were looking for. Literally, a 2000-page reference book. It was a complete waste of time. SolidWorks has saved my sanity and my carrier!
I've got a paid course explaining everything in depth, but this might even be better. Your videos are top tier for people seriously consider doing something with CAD. Skill takes practice, slowly
In college now using all CAD programs. Transitioning from being a former welder and machinist. Thank you for your videos. They are a great supplemental way to add to my learning that the instructors do not necessarily cover.
I'm a student in mechanical engineering. In the past, I've been using PTC Creo (3years) and a little bit of Catia (a few months). I had an interview for an internship today. The recruiter liked my profile, and he offered me a technical test on solidworks that will last 2 hours next week (12/13/2022). I will devote my entire free time to your tutorial. I will update my situation here ! Thank you for your amazing work. Greetings from France !
Thank you for taking the time to make this video. I’ve never discovered solid, works without your channel. I hope to make it a new hobby and maybe eventually start making money.
i'm not even all the way thrue the first episode but this is amazing. you explain so clearly and even put a bit of humor in it. i love it. thanks a lot and keep the good work coming greetings from the Netherlands.
Great information. I recently started working for an engineering company called Fives Lund LLC. These videos provide so much help and understanding. Thank you sir.
You are the best! Just subscribed to your channel! These type of tutorials is what I’m looking for. Thank you so much for putting the efforts on making these tutorial videos in such a detailed and a very well explanation for us viewers to understand. Keep up the good work!
I have been through a lot of videos about solidworks but believe me this is "the best" learning video I have ever watched...! Thank you soo much for your efforts man...! Appreciate that❤️👍
I like your comment in the webinar video "Imagine you go to this great school that has all of these classes, but nothing is organized." That was my experience at Gulf Coast State College. They have a lot of great stuff but, no one could effectively teach it or organize it for it to be taught effectively, and that is why I am here now learning from the beginning... Again.
Yes, it is. Organized to spread the lesson across a semester or quarter. Organized to inject a quiz, midterm and final exam. In reality, it can be learned in 8 hrs x 3 days in a "pay" solidworks class. However, even those classes just "follows a script" and if you fall behind because you clicked the wrong thing, closed your window, or wasted time changing the "color" of your interface screen...you will miss a few details. Ryan's video series is probably the best "free" stuff you can find on youtube, but it's up to yourself to figure out which ones to do first and be aggressive/tenacious to absolutely understand each micro step and click to solving a problem. No shortcuts.
Much useful information, I really appriciate it! Let me also add that this video could be better without the ubiquitous sound effects. Also, principally the whole screen ought to be visible all the time, to zoom in on something (that is visible already in their details) takes away the overall view without compensating benefit.
I love the content so far as I’m learning or looking to learn some sort of CAD software that will print to a 3-D printer. I’m trying to find a tutorial preferably in solid works that shows you how to design a simple shape that follows you through to printing the part on a 3D printer.
Oh my. Easy sub! Love the passion you’ve put into these tutorials I will be watching the full one over the weekend when I have the time. Thank you so much sir this will make my internship not nearly as stressful!
I am going to school and they are teaching this Aryan, I am an absolute beginner, Thank you for teaching this ! I am getting a headache in school because the help is not much .
Great stuff, you are an incredible resource for someone trying to sort out SW fairly quickly... I would be flopping around entirely, still, if it weren't for you.
What an amazing video! I struggled with solid works for a long time and this tutorial was concise and straight to the point. Thank you, definitely earned a sub!
WOW, a tutorial that actually starts at ground level! Thank you for this video. Maybe you should make a tutorial on how make a tutorial, for all those other people who claim to have a SW beginner level tutorial. LOL
incredible possibilities to those who master it. I am almost done with my first track, but there is so much more to discover and learn. TNice tutorials
Is the course a paid lifetime or a paid subscription for a certain duration? Planning to invest on myself some good skills and I am an absolute beginner.
I am an absolute beginner in solidworks and would like to learn the basics ! is this playlist good for that ? what version of Solidworks do I need to download ? thank you very much in advance
Aggy, Yes, for starters stick to this playlist because right now your BIGGEST enemy is RANDOM information. You need to stick to a series of sequencial information so you grasp everything step by step after each other without being overwhelmed. More importantly, go to the link below, and watch the webinar for free, if you stick to the end of the webinar, a free download button appears that allows you to download my mini course (still free) and that is magic! Hands down, there is no better source of learning solidworks as absolute beginners on the internet. I hope this helps courses.solidworkstutorials.net/Webinar-Registration?utm=SCPHomeCTA
Thank you for you service’s dude seriously every other video talking about cads is some monotoned voice over a screen play we need more entertaining teachers with enthusiasm for what they teach🙏
Subbed and liked. 10/10 tutorial honestly. It's one thing to know a subject and it's another thing to explaing it to others. I have a bit of experience with Blender and Illustrator so it's obviously easier this way but regardless this is gold.
Thank you very much. If you find this interesting and useful for you, I cannot stress this enough, go to the link below, and watch the webinar for free, if you stick to the end of the webinar, a free download button appears that allows you to download my mini-course (still free) and that is magic! Hands down, there is no better source of learning Solidworks as absolute beginners on the internet. I hope this helps courses.solidworkstutorials.net/Webinar-Registration?utm=SCPHomeCTA
@@with-Aryan Watched the webinar. Really amazing stuff, sad thing that I'm in a 3rd world country / financial situation where I can't afford your full course. I can tell by the webinar that it's an amazingly detailed and tought out course, and you really know how to logically build learning material.
Hey, could you explain the importance of the Origin point placement in relation to a part? Like when you created the box in this tutorial and dimensioned it (10x10), the Origin point is no longer on the line, but around the middle of the part. Should I start drawing the square with the Origin point at one of the Entity End Points, rather than the Entity Line itself? Therefore if I dimension the square, it will be fixed to the corner Entity End Point etc. Hope this makes sense. I struggle a little with 3D space (I'm a deep learner) in other applications like Adobe After Effects as well and need to get my head around it. I get what the Origin point is, just its placement importance on a part. Cheers
This is a great question. The importance of using the origin point is huge. And you have to bring the origin into account because initially, that's the only defined coordinate that is fixed in a fluid space you have. However, I wouldn't fix a corner of my square to it rather I place the square equally around the origin. i.e. if you connect the four corners of your square with lateral lines together, the junction of those two lines, is where you place your origin. The reason is, by doing that, you are placing your future model in the center of the designing space, and in the worst-case scenario, you set 2 of the 3 initial planes i.e. Front, Top and Right in the middle of your model. These planes can later be used for Mirroring or cutting your model in half or looking at the cross-section exactly in half. Now if you want to take it a step further and extrude your square also Mid-Plane instead of Blind, then you have all 3 planes cutting your model in half. Which gives you much more flexibility in your future steps, which cuts your modeling time enormously and this is one of the subtle techniques that separates a pro from a beginner.
@@with-Aryan Thanks Aryan that's a great answer. I did a basic google search for this and just couldn't find a definitive answer. I get it now finally! I'm going to have a look at your courses as you are very good at teaching. Cheers. Don
Really helpfull 👍 nice video ryan. really like how you explain every step so easy, i dont really understand how to teach my junior. But this video really help me how to teach, i will try to show this to my junior so we can study solidwork for basic and learn some english 😁. Sometimes when we have more learning source its so difficult to focus
My boss just paid $25,000 for a westcott pro series plasma table. I tried telling him it's going to take a lot of learning. I know he doesn't have the time ad it will fall on me. I think it came with a design 2 cut app but I know it's going to take more than that. I was hoping your course would help but it looks like I'll need the SOLIDWORKS app ?
yes you do, but through my course you have the opportunity to purchase a student licence very cheap. But the downside to that is that it cannot be used for commercial use. Either way you do need the SW licence
Hi Ryan, I have learned heaps from your videos and attempted to sign up for the webinar but got an error message - "unable to submit your request. Please contact the website administrator". Appreciate your assistance, thanks Mike
Hi! Thanks a lot for your videos, I am new to the software and they have been really helpful :) I have a small and maybe silly question: when I am drawing any feature (line, circle, arc) I can not see the dashed line relating this with the origin or any other created feature. How can I activate that when I am in "sketch"? Thanks a lot in advance for your help!
I have wanting to learn Solidworks for a long time. I have taken courses a few years ago and learned nothing. The teacher was talking so over my head I got lost. I just stumbled upon your youtube channel. The software is so expensive for me to learn. How would you suggest someone like me at my age 60 to learn? i am reinventing myself.
Hi Pete, if you feel lost, it's because what the teacher was teaching was not sequential so you couldn't make sense of it. Once you can't make sense of a subject, you won't understand it. What you should do is to learn it sequentially and you'll realize 60 is the new 40 as there are more than 30 people over 75+ in my course right now. So don't get dishearted. Have you watched my webinar? if not, that's the next thing you shoould do, linke is the description section of this video
How did you allow the dimensions to appear in the middle of the dimension line, I changed my document options to ANSI like you did in the video? Also thank you for this video series!
Hey man! Thanks for doing this! This is really helpful! I have been wanting to start a career in 3d design for a while now. I am confident that your course will help me to do that!
courses.solidworkstutorials.net/ The best way would be to check my page and read what's in it. I highly recommend you that course because I have put my whole heart into making it and people absolutely love it
How do I get the BLUE Origin symbol to appear or STAY on the screen?. I only get the RED one when beginning a sketch but it disappears when finishing the sketch when going to features.
Look for the EYE icon in the top center of your screen. Open that, and click on the Origin which looks like a XY coordinate in black. If you don't know which icon I'm talking about, you can do the same, by going to View> Hide/Show> Origin
I want to take your more deyailed class but i can not figure out how to reach it. Even with your red flashing lines. What i see is not what you seem to preent Please provide urls in the comment section Pointing to your site with clealy identified class I, 2, 3 Than you kindly
I learned to fell tress on a chainsaw before I used an axe to down a tree. But I know what your mean. Maybe say you would learn to pilot a plane before a helicopter I think you have to have your fixed wing before you can learn helicopter :)
"...just after a quick solution, and get hang of it...". That sounds like my millenial engineering coworker who just crowbars his autocad knowledge to create solidworks geometry. You know take complex 2D polygon from legacy autocad. Flatten and delete the overlapping lines and entities. Then get dimensions by "clicking" on thousands of stupid entities, with "questionable" accuracy on their original locations. Then adds a few changes to the polygon, and click on about a hundred individual solidwork constraints. Then finally does a "single" extrude operation. Finish. He is either "not patient" enough to learn the basics step by step, or "too afraid for his job" to take time off from "non-engineering" documentation or customer service to please his manager. He doesn't "get it" (invest some time, learn the basics, be able to do solidworks confidently, quickly and without question). I have given up hope trying to help him. This "engineer" will be "forever" second guessing his ability and speed to be able to make a "useable" solid model to be ultimately used for machining a part or a full assembly for machine design. Do not become this type of "worker". I was going to say engineer, but you don't need a degree to do solidworks. In fact, best people to learn this are machinists, who are always "free handing" fixtures and jigs.