Opening STL

Opening STL

Anonymous
Not applicable
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Message 1 of 11

Opening STL

Anonymous
Not applicable

I want to open exsisting stl file. I watched a tutorial to see how that was done. However, this is where the problem exsists. Clicking Modify does not show many of the options in the drop down menu that was in the video. What is missing for me are these.

Insert T-Spline

Insert Mesh

Convert

Make Uniform

Repair Body

Display Mode

Enable better Performance

Help me figure this out please.

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Replies (10)
Message 2 of 11

karyeka
Alumni
Alumni

The tutorial seems to have been out of date with all the changes to modify menu. Sorry, we will look into the tutorial.

 

Please see the pictures below for all the commands mentioned below. Insert T-Spline and Mesh are in Insert Menu. Convert remains in the Modify stack.

 

F360_insert_menu.PNG

 

F360_modify_menu_1.PNG

 

F360_modify_menu_2.PNG

 

please let me know if you have any questions.

 

Regards,

Anand

Fusion360 Development



Anand Karyekar

Forge Graphics
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Message 3 of 11

Anonymous
Not applicable

Thank you for the reply. However, my question was not answered. I will ask it again. How do I open a .stl file in Fusion 360?

 

Best regards

Bill Brown

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Message 4 of 11

yqliu
Alumni
Alumni

Hi Bill, if you click the "Insert Mesh" item under the "Insert" group (see the picture above in Anand's reply), it will show you a file open dialog and you can select your STL file there. This might be the simplest way. Or you can upload the stl file into a project and then open it from the side panel.

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Message 5 of 11

Anonymous
Not applicable

I am providing a screenshot of Insert tab on my version of Fusion 360. There is NO insert mesh on the drop down menu. At least not my version of 360. Someone at Autodesk needs to find a correct answer to my question.

Untitled-1.jpg

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Message 6 of 11

sdpatil
Autodesk
Autodesk

Hi,

 

"Insert Mesh" option is available within "Sculpt" workspace.

Please switch to Sculpt workspace from Model. In the snap we see you are in Model workspace.

I hope this will help you!

Screen Shot 2015-03-02 at 3.25.13 pm.png

 

Screen Shot 2015-03-02 at 3.24.57 pm.png

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Message 7 of 11

karyeka
Alumni
Alumni

By "Insert Mesh" command from the Insert Menu (first picture above) in a Direct Modeling design. For a Parametric Design, you'll need use Create Form to start a form, and place the STL mesh there.

 

What are the kinds of things you'd like to do once you've imported an STL?

There are few things at the moment you can do with the Mesh bodies (scale, translate, rotate, T-Spline snap). This is an area where we intend to add more in the future. Please review Jake Fowler and Paul Deyo's posts at http://forums.autodesk.com/t5/sketching-sculpting-modeling-and/stl-import-conversion/td-p/3840142/hi...

Also - http://forums.autodesk.com/t5/sketching-sculpting-modeling-and/solids-from-stl/m-p/4741155/highlight...

and http://forums.autodesk.com/t5/sketching-sculpting-modeling-and/can-t-select-a-body/td-p/5481787

 

I hope this helps, please let me know if you have any questions.

 

Regards,

Anand

Fusion360 Development

 

 

 

 



Anand Karyekar

Forge Graphics
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Message 8 of 11

Anonymous
Not applicable
I do not know if insert mesh is in my version of 360. It is not where
anyone says it is. I do not have a sculpt. At least not on a blank canvas.

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Message 9 of 11

daniel_lyall
Mentor
Mentor
Accepted solution

in you screen shot see the pinkish ball that`s the enter sculpt command once in the sculpt page look at all ready posted picks for where to find what you wont .stl are meshes 


Win10 pro | 16 GB ram | 4 GB graphics Quadro K2200 | Intel(R) 8Xeon(R) CPU E5-1620 v3 @ 3.50GHz 3.50 GHz

Daniel Lyall
The Big Boss
Mach3 User
My Websight, Daniels Wheelchair Customisations.
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Message 10 of 11

Oceanconcepts
Advisor
Advisor

Fusion has two major modes of operation: “Direct Modeling” (do not capture design history option) and Parametric, or history based modeling- that’s where you have the timeline at the bottom of the screen. Some of the command options are in different places depending on which mode you are in, which can be confusing. 

 

The image above, showing the Sculpt workspace, is what you see if you are in Direct modeling mode. In that case the command you are looking for becomes available when you select the Sculpt environment. You can enter Direct Modeling by selecting that option from the root component of a design. 

Fusion 360ScreenSnapz020.png

To enter the Sculpt environment when you are in history based modeling, you need to select the Create Form option here: 

 

Fusion 360ScreenSnapz021.png

 

Once you are in that mode, the Mesh command will appear under the Insert menu. 

 

Personally I tend to use the Direct, no history mode if I am developing a concept, and enter history based modeling once I have a good idea where I am headed. 

- Ron

Mostly Mac- currently M1 MacBook Pro

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Message 11 of 11

patrick.miller
Alumni
Alumni

Hey bbrown1951,

 

Can you tell me what tutorial you were looking at or post a link to the tutorial? We obviously want to make sure content is accurate when we move commands. Thanks.


Patrick Miller

User Experience Designer
Fusion 360 Learning
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