BETTER, FASTER, STRONGER 3D Printed Bolts | Errata

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  • Опубликовано: 26 июн 2024
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Комментарии • 74

  • @dacthewerewolf8425
    @dacthewerewolf8425 Месяц назад +31

    alternatively, cut the chamfer first, then the threads, then just move the chamfer after the threads in the feature timeline

    • @CADclassOfficial
      @CADclassOfficial  Месяц назад +3

      That works really well too! Great trick!

    • @osmanpasha96
      @osmanpasha96 24 дня назад

      Huh, interestingly, if you edit the chamfer after rearranging, you can see how to do this without rearranging (by creating the thread first) - just select the edge that was there before the thread - it's a small section or arc near the lead-in point of the thread

  • @GarthSnyder
    @GarthSnyder Месяц назад +10

    Oh wow, thanks for this, can’t wait to try it. I’ve been doing the rotated triangle thing forever.
    0.4mm is a crazy large amount of easing, though. If you need more than 0.15mm, I suspect that something in your printer or slicer setup is not tuned correctly.

    • @CADclassOfficial
      @CADclassOfficial  Месяц назад +1

      The 0.4 is mainly for some of our student that use older printers like the Ender 3 that doesn’t have super tight tolerances or for threads that may get fuzzed up over time with constant screwing. But yeah they could totally be tighter :)

    • @osmanpasha96
      @osmanpasha96 24 дня назад

      I agree, for my FDM 0.2mm is good enough. And 0.4 won't even work for smaller threads like M3.

  • @JLake3D
    @JLake3D Месяц назад +1

    Been doing this since I’ve started 3D design for 3D printing. It’s a great self-aligning feature 🤘

  • @MyChannel3141
    @MyChannel3141 Месяц назад +5

    Create the thread, right click and choose supress feature on the thread, and then create the chamfer. Then you can unsupress the thread and everything works.

    • @MrDB42
      @MrDB42 Месяц назад

      I only model the threads and create the face offsets at the end of the entire design process (before exporting either the STEP file or STL for printing). Again, saves computational time, and then the chamfers work on male or female threads.

  • @HLModTech
    @HLModTech Месяц назад +1

    Awesome project! So cool that a user took the time to share the idea. 💯👍

  • @GRainwater13
    @GRainwater13 Месяц назад +1

    Very helpful. Thank you!

  • @colynrobinson212
    @colynrobinson212 Месяц назад +3

    RUclips not in dark mode is a psychotic move

  • @JoepSwagemakers
    @JoepSwagemakers 28 дней назад +1

    Thank you for keeping me from screwing this up (pun intended)

  • @AdminAlley
    @AdminAlley Месяц назад +1

    Very cool, much quicker to implement!

  • @JoeMakes
    @JoeMakes 18 дней назад

    Great tips!

  • @lucmartz
    @lucmartz Месяц назад

    6:24 I like it!

  • @Bianchi77
    @Bianchi77 Месяц назад +1

    Nice video, thanks :)

  • @JOEDHIGGINS
    @JOEDHIGGINS Месяц назад +2

    For 3d printed threads, I find that especially with materials that require a heated enclosure, standard ansi and iso thread profiles can have overhangs that make coarser threads not print cleanly.
    This doesn't generally stop them from functioning, but it is annoying.
    Three solutions for folks that have this issue:
    1 Use inner-outter or inner-outer-inner wall printing order (do this anyway, it makes everything better).
    2 Use a tighter thread pitch. Not appropriate for all applications.
    3 Model threads with a 45 degree overhang. This is pretty easy. Just add a helix around your cylinder and sweep the profile you prefer. Generally, you can just do this to the male thread and boolean it with an offset to create the female.
    I will write a script that auto generates these shallower threads at some point, when I get sufficiently annoyed modeling the thing. For now, I just have a parametric thread model I use.

  • @josephpk4878
    @josephpk4878 Месяц назад +1

    Excellent presentation of a more refined solution. I figured out the triangle sweep method on my own, but always felt it was a sore thumb in my workflow - trying this mthod out right now. Subbed.

    • @CADclassOfficial
      @CADclassOfficial  Месяц назад

      Cheers :) thanks for the sub. We’ve got more content coming down the line this week

  • @H34...
    @H34... Месяц назад +2

    In what way are they stronger...?

    • @terryd8692
      @terryd8692 Месяц назад

      Printed vertically the thread will be weak as hell due to layer lines. You can get away with it if you're printing fisher price nuts and bolts. Anything small and they'll be useless

  • @gromain
    @gromain Месяц назад +1

    0.4mm offset is wild and depends a lot on the printer's calibration. I'm using between 0.1 and 0.2mm (the bigger the thread diameter the lower the offset) and my screws and nuts work fine.
    For the chamfer, I'm usually catching the overhanging part of the thread and round it to 0.5 to 1mm. Works great for catching the nut and bolt together and is easy to print.

  • @jedisct1
    @jedisct1 Месяц назад +1

    Subscribed right away.

  • @fiendfyre1726
    @fiendfyre1726 Месяц назад +36

    Good tip, but could have been condensed into a much shorter video.

    • @KarlLew
      @KarlLew Месяц назад +2

      This comment was too condensed and should have been expanded into a synopsis.

    • @frankbauerful
      @frankbauerful Месяц назад +1

      Making a shorter video requires even more skill than making a CAD model in fewer steps.

    • @valentinpianta
      @valentinpianta Месяц назад

      no

    • @b03tz
      @b03tz Месяц назад +1

      @@KarlLew Good this, shorter next.

  • @paulmeynell8866
    @paulmeynell8866 Месяц назад

    Very cool

  • @itigg
    @itigg Месяц назад

    As an engineer doing complex injection molding design for a decade and a half I would say the number of features in the model timeline is far less important than if your timeline represents design intent and how fast you can make the inevitable change requests to the model. For less complex designs it’s also better so that you can make configurations of the same model for use at different sizes. Less features is maybe great for a competition recreating an existing design but falls flat in the real world of designing something new.

  • @jackykoning
    @jackykoning Месяц назад +3

    Just use inline easy bolts for openscad. It will suit most requirements.

    • @CADclassOfficial
      @CADclassOfficial  Месяц назад

      We haven’t discussed doing a course on openscad yet but we’ll see if any of our other students are interested :) our next course and book is going to diving into Onshape with a slight robotics team lean

  • @mattharvey8712
    @mattharvey8712 Месяц назад +1

    Bravo.....acme thread.......cheers

    • @CADclassOfficial
      @CADclassOfficial  Месяц назад

      Love me some ACME threads. Always reminds me of my milling days with those gigantic vices :)

  • @WerneckDexter
    @WerneckDexter Месяц назад +1

    Hello there. Thanks for the video.
    I coincidentally was looking for this solution few days before your video, just found out those techniques was not working for me. Either the partial thread with chamfer and the timeline one.
    At the end I realized these don’t work with BSP. 🙄

  • @creamofbotulismsoup9900
    @creamofbotulismsoup9900 Месяц назад +1

    A lot of the time you're better off just using a tap/die. Unless it's an unusual size, or for some reason you need to print off a ton of parts with threads, it will often make more sense to just cut the threads rather than take the time to design them. The cheapest tap and die set you can find will work perfectly fine since it's plastic. Plus the threads will be way better quality, especially on smaller sizes that an FDM printer has no chance of printing well.

    • @CADclassOfficial
      @CADclassOfficial  Месяц назад

      Definitely although I have had to put in so many threads into prints that my tap heats up from friction and melts rather than cuts the plastic prints so best to keep an eye on it :)

  • @church493
    @church493 Месяц назад +2

    Even better workflow optimization would be to not design bolt or nut at all.
    Just use predesigned ones of type/length/thread from library or parametric model, done by self earlier or 3rd parties.
    "To not reinvent wheel" in each project all over again. And it's not applicable to just bolts/nuts. There are loads of standartised parts, including various fasteners, out there, including libraries or models for them.
    At most, it should be extended with some 3d printing custom nitbits, like smart bridging for dealing with hex hole quality/supports/postproduction, and maybe adding flank-drive rounding or corner hollowing of hex holes to increase resilency to stripping, and even such customisations can be reused from previous work/models.

    • @CADclassOfficial
      @CADclassOfficial  Месяц назад

      Definitely :) this video isn’t about making a bolt in heart thought it’s about any threads for any project

  • @elijahle7936
    @elijahle7936 Месяц назад +1

    I go chamfer(just deeper than the thread), thread, delete flat end of the thread. Sometimes it bugs out but usually it works great.

    • @CADclassOfficial
      @CADclassOfficial  Месяц назад

      Interesting :) one of the other comments said to make a chamfer, add a thread under it and then move the chamfer after it in the timeline and it does in fact work

  • @SerPorit
    @SerPorit Месяц назад

    Well, actually there is a way to do it using only one feature (the chamfer itself) and a small trick with timeline. Make a thread, then go one step back in timeline (before the thread creation) create a chamfer, move the timeline to the end and swap the thread and the chamfer in the timeline (change the order). The result will be the same, with ONE operation .

  • @uiopuiop3472
    @uiopuiop3472 Месяц назад +1

    i use the decal bolts. as god sayd: they decal bolts work as well for cad!!

    • @CADclassOfficial
      @CADclassOfficial  Месяц назад

      Preech

    • @BillyStanley
      @BillyStanley Месяц назад

      What is meant by "decal?"

    • @uiopuiop3472
      @uiopuiop3472 Месяц назад

      @@BillyStanley above the top af. like in fakery but in rl... you get it! not the truth bolts in cad!!

    • @uiopuiop3472
      @uiopuiop3472 Месяц назад

      @@BillyStanley the fakery of bolt. in the cad!

  • @ocieward
    @ocieward Месяц назад +2

    I’m sorry, this was in my feed and I watched it and could tell that at the 1:00 mark, all the information that was going to be said was already said. Yes, time can be saved by doing this, but how much - 20 sec? The video title is also misleading, since the faster refers to the modeling and not the printing and is only 20 sec improvement, and the. Idea does not address better or stronger in any way.

    • @CADclassOfficial
      @CADclassOfficial  Месяц назад +1

      We’re not a massive fan of unnecessarily long videos that bait the solution till the end. If you get what you need at the beginning, fantastic, and if you want to learn a bit more about the topic then stick around :)

  • @saumyacow4435
    @saumyacow4435 Месяц назад

    What's Autodesk really like to use? I see mixed reviews on it. And what does it actually cost? And how well does it handle PCB design?

    • @CADclassOfficial
      @CADclassOfficial  Месяц назад

      It’s my personal favorite CAD software. It’s very powerful for hobbyists but probably not the best choice for an engineering firm. It’s completely free but there is a paid version but in our course we tell you how you can get it completely for free. I don’t have a ton of experience with the PCB side but from what I’ve seen it does in fact work well. A few of our student have gotten prototype boards from their PCB CAD models and I think this is where fusion updates a lot of tools every month too.

    • @saumyacow4435
      @saumyacow4435 Месяц назад

      @@CADclassOfficial As I understand it, the free version of fusion is limited to 2 layer PCBs. Which is a showstopper for me. Also, I want a painless way to do 3D metal printing. Does the subscription version of fusion allow me to get stuff made? I see Autodesk touting its additive manufacturing extension, which is more expensive than fusion itself!. And I'm assuming its not really necessary to actually get something made. I mostly do electronics design, but I'm interested in learning CAD. Thanks.

  • @strongme80
    @strongme80 Месяц назад

    Where's the "stronger" part? Or did I miss something.

  • @lexdysic416
    @lexdysic416 Месяц назад

    It seems ridiculous that F360 still hasn't implemented threads with 3d printing tolerances.

  • @jamiethomas4079
    @jamiethomas4079 Месяц назад

    I'm usually in too much a hurry when I need threads for whatever reason. I've found the faster solution to be goto mcmaster and download the 3d model from there and modify it if needed.

  • @julianopolito
    @julianopolito Месяц назад

    After using face offset, chamfer doesn't work. If I do thread+chamfer, offset faces will undo the chamfer. Any tips?

    • @johnnycardoso1965
      @johnnycardoso1965 Месяц назад

      alternatively, cut the chamfer first, then the threads, then just move the chamfer after the threads in the feature timeline

    • @julianopolito
      @julianopolito Месяц назад

      @@johnnycardoso1965 doesn't work. at least not like in the video. When he chamfers, he can chamfer any length. Here it won't work. Is it because I'm using the free version? @CADclassOfficial

    • @johnnycardoso1965
      @johnnycardoso1965 Месяц назад

      @julianopolito, create a 1mm chamfer, then create the thread, with modeling and displacement of 1mm (the same as the applied chamfer). I use 1mm+25%=1.25mm. It will work depending on the thread size you are using.
      It doesn't matter what version of Fusion it is, as it's just a build operation.
      This tip I gave is more complex, as you create the thread with displacement, suppress it in the history and then create the chamfer and then move the chamfer to before the construction of the thread, in the history. Then you cancel the thread suppression.
      @julianopolito, are you Brazilian?

    • @julianopolito
      @julianopolito Месяц назад

      @@johnnycardoso1965 Sim, brasileiro. Você também?

  • @VEC7ORlt
    @VEC7ORlt Месяц назад

    3D printing threads is kinda meh to begin with to even bother, unless its something mildly cosmetic, fasteners are the only way.
    That tangent on 2 vs 3 features - oh geee, just staph - things like that tend to iron out automatically the more you use your CAD.

  • @ArcAiN6
    @ArcAiN6 Месяц назад +2

    2/3 of the way into the video i stopped... because you literally when nowhere... what a colossal waste of time

  • @paleopteryx
    @paleopteryx Месяц назад +5

    Thumbs down for not mentioning it was EXCLUSIVELY about the stupid Fusion 360. Made me waste my time. It's not "CAD", it's just Fusion 360. Other "CAD" have different ways of making threads. There's even a brilliant library for OpenSCAD that creates wonderful threads in seconds.

    • @CADclassOfficial
      @CADclassOfficial  Месяц назад

      There is also this faster library in Fusion too, this was more about making custom threads for any type of project, not just for bolts :)

  • @Dark_Phoinix
    @Dark_Phoinix Месяц назад +2

    BLA BLA BLA AND PRINT?

    • @caiocallor
      @caiocallor Месяц назад

      "CAD Class", not "printing and filming"