![]() ![]() With planes, simple surfaces (sphere, cylinder) and more complex geometry with NURBS-patches. STEP/IGES and other CAD formats represent surfaces (“boundary representation”) mathematically. (It requires a bit of knowledge and understanding, fix drawings, but having STP import/export in blender would surely be nice for those working in, or width people in the ‘other world’ side of the industry. I somehow endup with a lot of duplicated objects, though they can be removed manually. When i go the other way FreeCad STP model => collada /STL => blender May i sugest someone to develop STP export import.Īs the conversion blender => collada => STP works (although file size might explode) And then blender might be a luxery as your conversion to STL will not contain suprices its exactly a circle with amount of faces you considered smooth.Īnd now why did i post it in the Blender development discusion, well to straighten some missunderstanding but also because freecad is also an opensource drawing tool. ![]() It explains how to convert an imported model (collada) to the other industry mesh format STP.Īnd notice in the youtube link above at some point there is a talk about the fit setting when converting to STP, in here relies a holly grail of converting, that fit is about what to do with circle approximation, how much a line can be off, off a circle in the STP generation process, and this in general how the ‘other side’ formats handle circle objects, and free form objects during conversions.īe also aware if you recieve some NGON circle from ‘other side’ 3d format, that it is most likely a approximation if you depend on it, for fitting parts, than remind yourself their NGON isnt round nor is your blender circle (but at least you knew that), and yes some CAM might prefer ‘other world’ 3d formats because they understan drill up and drill down, with complex 3D prints even they have problems. I always wondered why it is that they generated such a bad topology.īy the way if you want to go back from blender to collada to STP you have to watch this: While it gives us work to do retopo (some bevel can fix a lot in thos drawings). Not a fault of those formats, most of the time fault of low level conversion ( fit level ), or errors in the converting code of those programs. When they create a STL or OBJ or Collada, their exported drawings look bad… So when they do a conversion to a “real” mesh layout, they generate artifacts. Once they save it as mesh data, based upon their descriptions, ( ea at positions x,y,z drill a 8mm hole 20 mm down or make a rounded corners of radius 7 mm), those programs have to convert.īefore this point all they did was procedural (as modifier based in blender terms) drawing. Thus while those programs show perfect shapes at all zoom levels in their editors. (PS i do understrand a robot arm drilling a hole is a perfect round hole, its just not a perfect drawing). So the people who blame you might not understand digital drawings… ![]() We get blamed for triangulated meshes, but at a lower lever its all a computer understands dot vertix positions. We blender users know that computers are digital and thus true roundness doesnt exist. Its excelent in a sence that a drillhole is exactly round. STP was designed for CAM (computer aided manufacturing), and thus a language with commands such as drill down drill up drill size etc. Today i noticed what is really going wrong each time with those files. If you ever did work for clients who gave you FBX or STEP or IGES files (while they claimed their superior file formats, (indeed STEP is an ISO certified format, but main industry lost interest for it.Īnd you had to work with it, for a render or animation or so, or to fix their meshes because their 3d printer couldnt handle it, as it looked terrible… As you all know 42 is the final answer of life, the universe (and thus also all 3d file conversions). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |