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Nick Wheeler07/06/2019 11:19:21
1227 forum posts
101 photos

Nigel, you're STILL thinking in separate 2d drawings!

Model your crank main journals from one long properly defined cylinder. Do the same for the big end journals, mapping them around the end of the main journal. Then add the webs, positioning them with your dimensions. With some practice, you could reuse one web as many times as you need. Have the program join each new feature to the existing ones. Then have it cut away the joining parts you no longer need. The longest part of the job will be positioning the webs.

David Jupp07/06/2019 11:43:46
978 forum posts
26 photos

Nigel - the PDF exercises for Alibre products are on the Alibre web site (Help & Learning area).

For Alibre Design

For Alibre Atom3D

I'm not able to find any record of a trial for you in the licensing system (searching by Nigel, or by Graham) - so am not able to renew or extend trial (PM me some details if you'd like me to search again).

Baz07/06/2019 11:47:38
1033 forum posts
2 photos

Maybe MEW should continue the Alibre Atom series with a series of how to draw a two throw crankshaft and perhaps an expansion link and also a cylinder block with ports and passages in, this would be of more practical use to a model engineer representing things he will be interested in making, just my 2p worth.

SillyOldDuffer07/06/2019 12:04:14
10668 forum posts
2415 photos

Posted by Nigel Graham 2 on 07/06/2019 10:17:54:

...

Now a crankshaft with disc webs is a chain of symmetrical, simple cylinders of known sizes, so can be assembled by calculating their centre co-ordinates. If the assembly is of more complicated, varied, unsymmetrical elements and sub-assemblies, such calculations become just too difficult.

So just don't expect me to model the rest of the engine around the shaft!

This leads to a particularly disheartening aspect created unwittingly by the CAD manufacturers' web-sites. Understandably they illustrate what their software can be used to produce; but obviously by staff draughts-people using its most advanced techniques to the limit, far beyond anything I could be fairly expected to achieve.

Crankshaft calculations may be too difficult for the average Joe, but it is possible. One of the advantages of 3D CAD is the tool may be able to help, perhaps even doing the whole calculation.

I didn't expect FreeCAD to have much to offer, but it has part of the answer. Maybe more if I looked harder. My cylinder example would be balanced about the axis of rotation (Z in the example) were it not for the notch. FreeCAD can tell me where the objects Centre of Gravity is, yellow dot near the mouse pointer:

freecadcog.jpg

Zooming in shows the C.O.G isn't on the Z axis:

freecadcogzoom.jpg

I could measure how far off the Centre of Gravity is and use that to calculate a counter-balance. Or I could add or subtract lumps from the cylinder until the yellow dot sits 'close enough' to the biue line. Or, if it doesn't exist already, I could write a Python Program to search for optimum balance. These methods would only address static balance, but someone who knew the ropes could program to optimise dynamic balance. In the not too distance past engineers would do this with teams of people doing the sums and testing the result with a real model. Now months or even years of work can be done in seconds.

This is grown-up stuff. You can't expect to do it without a good understanding of the problem, knowing whether or not your software supports that kind of problem, and of course - knowing how to drive the tool to get the right result. Learning how to do this requires substantial time and effort.

Another job the these tools can do in a fairly straightforward way is Finite Element Analysis. FEA shows where stress occurs in a loaded structure and identifies where that stress is too much for the material. It finds weak spots so they can be strengthened, and it highlights over-strong spots that can be removed to reduce weight. The ability to do this is very useful to anyone designing a crankshaft.

You said ' Understandably they illustrate what their software can be used to produce; but obviously by staff draughts-people using its most advanced techniques to the limit, far beyond anything I could be fairly expected to achieve.' Of course these tools are demonstrated by experts! Stradivarius would never have sold a violin by asking a random passer-by to demonstrate its merits.

But I think you're doing yourself down by believing using them is 'far beyond anything I could be fairly expected to achieve.' More likely you don't have the time and patience needed to break into 3D-CAD properly. I notice you're trying learn TC by modelling a crankshaft. That's an advanced object when you don't quite know the ropes. Like almost every tool, it's better for beginners to explore complex software by keeping it simple at first.

Another mistake is to leave long gaps between sessions. My poor old dad failed utterly with his mobile phone because having had stuff explained, he wouldn't try it for a week or three, by which time he'd forgotten the lesson. By not getting stuck in he destroyed his self-confidence. Ironically I've developed the exactly same problem with Smart Phones...

Dave

 

 

 

 

Edited By SillyOldDuffer on 07/06/2019 12:06:54

John Hinkley07/06/2019 12:10:52
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1545 forum posts
484 photos

Like Nigel, I tried many 3D CAD programs and couldn't get to grips with any of them, at all. After a longish break, I decided to give the Alibre Atom package a go. I had to virtually forget EVERYTHING that I'd applied to 2D drawing ( I have no training or work experience in technical dawing ) and start from scratch. I determined to "make" the parts as if I was constructing them from stock material. For example, I started to design a 4-cylinder engine and started with the crank, starting at the front and progreesively adding webs and bearing journals, etc, until I had a complete part. It didn't take long at all and in the end looked like this:

Crankshaft

It shouldn't be too difficult to draw a two-throw crank with simple constructional steps in a similar manner, I wouldn't have thought.

I'm not saying that this is the best, or only way, to do it, just that this is how I approached the "problem" of getting my head around the concept of 3D drafting. With hindsight and now with more experience with the Atom program I would have used a slightly different approach and used for example, the "mirror" tool to replicate the crank webs instead of producing each one individually. ( I've redone it this way since. )

Persevere, Nigel. I promise it is both rewarding and satisfying when it finally "clicks" and you produce an aesthetically pleasing result.

John

Nigel Graham 207/06/2019 13:16:03
3293 forum posts
112 photos

Baz -

Interesting point that. Not necessarily engine parts but certainly items of clear interest that could become useful reality - e.g. simple workshop tools and accessories.

'

David -

Thank you. Ah, that seems odd then. I'd taken the trial version straight from Alibre's (or Mintronics' ? ) site opened by a direct browser link, so I don't know if Alibre or its agent has a register separate from the magazine's.

Thank you for kind offer but given the gamble, I think it wiser to stay with TurboCAD. If I am forced to use only its 2D mode, I'll have to accept the frustration but won't have lost any more than the time already spent.

Even with Alibre's trial version, I'd be faced with a new, totally different, 3D CAD system from scratch. If I can't master that either, I'll have wasted hours on what will last only 6 months anyway. If however Alibre is saying I've have no choice but outright purchase, I'd almost certainly end up losing both many hours and £240.

'

Nicholas -

I can assure you I was trying to work in 3D!

By subtraction though, and co-ordinate arithmetic, as I cannot use the intended assembly methods.

I'd imagined I was cutting the shaft from a billet of steel 2.5" dia for its full length. After a few goes at establishing the right order, I subtracted an annulus from each end of the ' Primitive ' cylinder to leave the end journals. As I wanted, it now looked like a rolling-pin.

Step-by-step and similarly, I removed the " metal " around each crank-pin:

I drew the pin " within " the billet, then copied it in place twice; colouring the copies to guide me. I kept copy 1 as-is, enlarged copy 2 to about 4" dia to cover the throw, then subtracted copy 1 from 2. Finally, subtracted copy 2 with " pin hole " from the billet, to expose the original pin. All correct so far.

It went to rats somewhere after that, including something that changed the shaft from a generated cylinder to a strange, intractable " TC Surface ". I don't know what that is geometrically. Nor if TC there stands for TurboCAD or something else.

This was all in 3D mode, using the various viewing angles to verify progress - until it went wrong.

My later thought about mapping the features' co-ordinates was forced on me by TurboCAD's baffling 3D assembly methods: abstruse combinations of various entity-types, tools, etc. Using such mapping works with straightforward, symmetrical objects, but breaks down with increasing complexity.

JasonB07/06/2019 13:24:07
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25215 forum posts
3105 photos
1 articles

Is the scribing block not a useful workshop tool and of interest to model engineers? Also bear in mind that MEW is not the sole preserve of Model engineers, plenty of home workshop users not interested in models

I tend to do crankshafts a piece at a time rather than subtracting from the solid, infact I do that quite a lot as parts are often fabricated from more than one piece rather than cutting from solid

David Jupp07/06/2019 13:28:34
978 forum posts
26 photos

Nigel - if when taking the Alibre trial something got mis-typed, that could explain why I can't find you (this is in the master licensing system where everything ends up, regardless of where it originated).

If you should change your mind and want to have another go - PM me your trial code (if you took the extended trial), or the e-mail address that you used when activating the trial.

SillyOldDuffer07/06/2019 14:27:36
10668 forum posts
2415 photos

Posted by Nigel Graham 2 on 07/06/2019 13:16:03:

...

It went to rats somewhere after that, including something that changed the shaft from a generated cylinder to a strange, intractable " TC Surface ". I don't know what that is geometrically.

...

I've suffered 'going to rats' symptoms myself, both in FreeCAD and Fusion360. In both cases, as a learner feeling my way, I was creating objects that looked OK, but were incomplete or inconsistent. Production glitches don't matter unless something depends on them later, but as the model develops these omissions cause the software to behave unexpectedly as it tries to display a faulty structure. Bit like doing a Sudoku puzzle were you suddenly hit a contradiction caused by an earlier mistook. You have to backtrack.

FreeCAD and Fusion both maintain edit timelines. Fusion's is along the bottom of the screen and it rather helpfully puts yellow (warning) or red (broken) triangles on any earlier step that's in trouble. FreeCAD is less obvious but opening up earlier steps often reveals a new error message. Correcting the problem usually flows up the timeline and restores sanity. TurboCAD may have a similar facility, but it needs a TurboCAD expert to know. The TurboCAD forum might do better than this one.

Dave

Nigel Graham 207/06/2019 14:33:10
3293 forum posts
112 photos

JasonB _

Sorry - I can't see your post actually on this thread, and my e-mail system send notifications randomly. Anyway, you wrote:

" Is the scribing block not a useful workshop tool and of interest to model engineers? Also bear in mind that MEW is not the sole preserve of Model engineers, plenty of home workshop users not interested in models

I tend to do crankshafts a piece at a time rather than subtracting from the solid "

'

With respect, you've missed my 2 points there though a scribing-block is indeed more useful than the strange contraption Alibre uses as an exercise.

It does not matter what is being drawn, nor by whom and for what purpose beyond the drawing, as the object of the exercise is how to draw it by CAD.

My choosing to draw a crankshaft has nothing to do with how to make it beyond knowing it can be made to that design.

I chose it purely for its geometrical and CAD properties as a series of symmetrical, simple entities; and I have tried drawing it both by assembling those entities (the 'approved' CAD way I gather), and by subtracting.

And I drew in the latter way not necessarily because I might make it that way, but to find a drawing technique I could use that is easier for me than by drawing by assembly.

Andrew Johnston07/06/2019 15:02:43
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7061 forum posts
719 photos
Posted by Nigel Graham 2 on 07/06/2019 14:33:10:

My choosing to draw a crankshaft has nothing to do with how to make it beyond knowing it can be made to that design.

Therein lies part of the problem. When drawing in CAD the method of manufacture of the part should be uppermost in the mind. There are three ways to create a crankshaft:

  1. Create a single part making cylinders and webs in sequence until the crankshaft exists as a single part
  2. Create individual parts such as cylinders and webs and then put them together in an assembly
  3. Start with an oversize block and subtract to create the crankshaft

Method 1 would be used if the crankshaft was to be machined from solid, so it is one part and a 2D drawing can be created for the part. Method 2 would be used if the crankshaft is to be built up; 2D drawings of each part can be simply made. Method 3 is similar to 1, but seems a rather odd way to do it.

Andrew

Nigel Graham 207/06/2019 15:24:40
3293 forum posts
112 photos

No, Andrew, sorry but how to make a crankshaft it is not part of the problem at all!

The entire problem is purely whether I can learn 3D CAD modelling.

Of course I know you have to think how an object will be made in order to design it, but I am trying to concentrate simply on the drawing techniques.

If I had drawn merely a random string of cylinders of different sizes, no-one would have worried about what it is beyond what I intended: a drawing exercise!

Yes, I picked on something familiar, but I did not set out to worry how it would be made, and as drawn you can make how you wish.

I cannot use CAD to help me design anything until I know how to use CAD, but it's becoming clear I cannot learn itl.

JasonB07/06/2019 15:46:31
avatar
25215 forum posts
3105 photos
1 articles
Posted by Nigel Graham 2 on 07/06/2019 14:33:10:

 

'

With respect, you've missed my 2 points there though a scribing-block is indeed more useful than the strange contraption Alibre uses as an exercise.

No You have missed the point.

MEW used a scribing block as a simple example to model. If you eventually find your way to the Mintronics site you will find an additional manual for about £11.50 which is a full length version of what was in the mag but with full size images not the much reduced ones in the mag. This manual if free to those who took up the MEW extended trial.

There are several forum members who having completed drawing the scribing block then went on to working through the crank/universal joint exercise and with a bit of help from the forum got it all to work. This is more advanced so won't help you with the basics.

Out of interest was your original trial of Alibre the extended 6mth MEW one or just the two weeks off the net, you would have needed a copy of the magazine to know the correct URL for the extended offer.

have you got a fag packet sketch or extract from what info you do have of this waggon, I'm sure one of us would draw it up in cad to point you in the right direction, seem to remember asking this of you a few nonths ago what the same issues were discussed but nothing forthcoming

Edited By JasonB on 07/06/2019 15:49:35

Edited By JasonB on 07/06/2019 16:11:04

Nigel Graham 207/06/2019 20:46:30
3293 forum posts
112 photos

JasonB

Thank you for that offer of help.

First though, I know the scribing-block was simply an exercise! So was that crankshaft.

That does not matter. Most of my TurboCAD 3D drawings are merely simple geometrical figures, to try to understand how to use the programme. Real objects are for IF I can draw them.

I know I could have obtained the back-editions of MEW, and the offered manual; but I had lost heart by then and realised I am better with a scrappy knowledge of TurboCAD in 2D, than risking a complete new start with no real hope of better success.

'

I was in a sort of cleft stick.

Alibre Atom is totally different from TC. It was offered by Alibre hoping for sales of full versions to those who are confident enough from the MEW course, to take it much further.

I did not realise I'd missed anything until my first subscription edition of MEW revealed the gap in the Alibre serial. I thought I had started my subscription correctly, but the coversoon showed not.

I was finding TC's 3D world ever more confusing, and I feared any other CAD would be no better; with the text seeming to me the cosily reassurance of painting-by-numbers.

Select this, enter that value, click here... And it works, but what have I actually done or understood more fundamentally than following an exercise by rote?

Hence the cleft stick, if not trident. I bought TurboCAD in the first place partly because I wanted genuinely to draw in both 2D and 3D. I did not know then the experts insist on 3D-first then extract the elevations; but that might not have mattered. (I don't know if TurboCAD offers that - but it does offer the straight 2D/3D choice).

Do I catch up on Alibre with two possible outcomes, or cut my losses so far? My two likely Alibre outcomes would be completing that one exercise without understanding it, before the trial offer expired; or being lulled by completing the series into buying the costly full version then finding it too hard for any practical use.

TurboCAD 3D is too difficult beyond a very simple level of non-dimensioned pictures of little practical value, of very simple items. I had no guarantee, evidence or belief any other 3D CAD is any easier.

Yet I can produce just-adequate 2D drawings in TurboCAD, good enough for my own use; so why risk all that money and time chasing such an uncertainty despite my original wishes?

'

I have to admit I do not have the intellect for 3D CAD, in any make. It's just too difficult.

'

Regarding your kind offer, thank you very much but I have no information that would allow anyone to help me. I have to complete designing my wagon's engine and transmission, and details including the steering-gear and boiler fittings. Much of it is design-on-the-fly; I may have to re-work some areas made too many years ago. There are no extant works drawings, but I have found a model engine whose geometry is close enough to be adapted; and have its GA in hand, orthographic of course.

I don't recall that earlier discussion but I did appeal for some TurboCAD help when I temporarily lost contact with its users' forum.

I know that I cannot use 3D in designing any of what my own project still needs; but I am afraid someone giving me a nice 3D CAD image of it would only stress my own inability in such drawing .

Colin Heseltine07/06/2019 23:02:12
744 forum posts
375 photos

Nigel,

I feel your pain regarding Turbocad 3D drawing. I bought Turbocad several years ago and have been unable to get to grips with it. Having recently bought a 3D printer I want to be able to draw things up that I can print. I worked through the exercise in MEW but struggled a bit due to the size of the pictures in the article. I am red/green colourblind and this has caused a few issues not being able to see the colours of fine lines. Once I found I could increase the line widths I found things quite a bit easier. I found the concepts easier to grasp in Alibre than in Turbocad, especially selecting facets. I feel that with some practice it will become easier. I think it is more intuitive than TC.

I intend to work through the exercise again using the larger pictures in the .pdf rather than a large magnifying glass to read pictures in the mag, this was one of the things which slowed me down. I will also work through exercise on the web site.

I decided to bite the bullet and purchase a licence.

Baz's suggestion that MEW run other articles on Alibre 3D certainly would certainly appeal to me.

Colin

Nigel Graham 208/06/2019 10:27:46
3293 forum posts
112 photos

Colin -

Thank you for the supporting comments! I was beginning to feel only I cannot learn something everyone else finds easy.

Yes, I find TurboCAD very non-intuitive. Very confusing, too.

Someone referred me to a TC 3D exercise whose subject was completely random, but with some useful concepts. Unfortunately it was for TC 15, too different from my 19 Deluxe edition to be very helpful.

Another problem is the TC 19 Deluxe's own " manual ". It is very poorly, haphazardly written and arranged, explains little, even contains notes on tools it admits not in that version of TC! Being a .pdf document, you cannot search it by text, only page number. However, I overcame that by making a printed, alphabetical index to it.

Fusion deterred me completely. I completed the first Alibre instalment, missed the next two, could have caught up but see no advantages in that; and frankly, now think any 3D CAD system is beyond me.

'

Colour-blindness: May I make a suggestion? This won't help you read the drawings in the magazine, but for your own creations, could you select from the available palette colours you can differentiate easily, and note their names, for regular use? This would particularly help if Alibre allows custom templates as TurboCAD does, including I think, line thicknesses and colours.

'

Baz' suggestion: I agree in principle but really its examples ought cover a reasonable range of interests within model-engineering, and be paralleled by articles in other editions for TurboCAD and Fusion. The exercises can be from real projects but should be seen as just CAD exercises. It would be worth stressing that expertise in CAD can trap you into designing objects difficult or impossible to make - even professional draughts-people fall into that trap.

I don't know of any other worth-while CAD makes used by amateur engineers. SolidWorks is used widely in industry but not sold to hobby users; AutoCAD is similarly limited... and no doubt both are commercially "economical"! I think this only from their web-sites: it might be worth asking them.

David Jupp08/06/2019 11:41:26
978 forum posts
26 photos

Graham,

Alibre has several built in colour schemes, you can edit these and also set up you own custom colour schemes. I get that you aren't going to try again with Alibre, I just mention it for the benefit of others who may have restricted colour vision (or just don't like the standard choices).

Nick Hulme08/06/2019 17:15:51
750 forum posts
37 photos

I started using CAD/CAM at 50, get stuck in, if you have the drive to do it you will succeed!

Enough!08/06/2019 17:46:22
1719 forum posts
1 photos

Just a thought: are there no CAD training courses available for a reasonable cost at local educational establishments?

I learnt CAD professionally (Pro/Engineer .... and if you want to see unituitive ....) about 25 years ago when the company I was working for introduced it. Companies are not about to pay people to pick it up on the fly so to speak. They send you on a training course where you get graduated professional instruction which is much better. In particular you can ask questions to address those mental blocks that arise.

David Jupp08/06/2019 18:13:15
978 forum posts
26 photos

Sometimes possible to get free (or very low cost) training in specific CAD packages - but tends to be funded by schemes linked to creating or protecting jobs, not really for hobbyists. It's usually the big name, expensive packages.

Universities/Colleges at least already have the computers and get very attractive deals on the software. If provided on a proper commercial basis the cost of training is likely to run into hundreds of pounds per person. Realistically a couple of full days is required to cover all the basics. Numbers in class best kept low so individual attention is possible (which doesn't help with cost per person).

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