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Thread: how do you design your robot with exact dimensions and...

  1. #11
    How much is Solidworks or similar

  2. #12
    kane's Avatar
    Roboteer

    Either start with a trial version or an educational version if you can get hold of one.
    Kane Aston
    http://www.makerobotics.com

    Co-owner and builder of BEHEMOTH

  3. #13

  4. #14
    It is impossible to answer how long it will take, as it would be like trying to answer how long is a piece of string?

    It won't be hours, that is for sure. A few days might get you going and within a week or two I'd expect to be quite comfortable. That said, I have never worked with Solidworks. People like Eventorizon have, though, and he has been using the software for years. He appears to be able to create pretty much anything in the programme.

    I wouldn't ignore Google Sketchup. It is very capable of helping with a first robot. I designed Tormenta 2 completely in Sketchup before building:

    http://i1088.photobucket.com/albums/i32 ... 1341527432
    http://i1088.photobucket.com/albums/i32 ... 1341527477
    http://i1088.photobucket.com/albums/i32 ... 1341527422

    As you can see the programme is capable of doing quite a lot. The final robot changed some from the CAD, but it helped hugely. Sketchup took me less than an hour to get used to.

  5. #15
    Max's Avatar
    Member

    It didn't take me very long to learn the basics of solidworks- only a couple of hours. And you can learn a lot through trial and error.
    My advise is to just give it a go

  6. #16

  7. #17
    I use AutoDesk Inventor - it works in a very similar way to Solidworks but I prefer some of the features and stress analysis/3D animations and genuine simulations.
    Once you have the basic's of any CAD program, they all become fairly similar to use for basic things.

    Here's my first play around with an animation in Inventor.


    And here's a genuine Simulation with 13kg steel block on the end of the flipper running at 20 bar John Reid did that one when we were working a few things out.

    And some very useful stress analysis on the flipper arm. This shows where any weak points are when the full force of the ram is pushing on it.

    3D Cad packages really are worth learning. It will add a huge amount to your CV and employability if your looking into anything engineering/design related.

  8. #18

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