@daniel_lyall wrote:
@Anonymous like phil said it would be good to see non common as mud stocks it's going to be hard but the end will be good by the time you get there fusion will be there.
you just needed to get that fancy router as well.
phil i think doing some instructions on this stuff would be good and charge for it to there is not a lot out there that is of much use.
@daniel_lyall
That's for sure.
I spent the morning at Bisley last Saturday.
Two comomon elements will emerge with the good target shooters.
1. 10,000 rounds of practise!
2. Properly fitted stock!
The rifle industry went on a stupid path after the major wars of the last century.
Accountants tock over and the idea of a stock fitting a person became expencive.
So now one size fits no-one!
What at I aim to do is turn the clock back 150 years but do it with digital design!
problem there is my cad skills are poor! Well so far as organic modelling I have no experience at all. And there's lots of organic curves in a gun stock.
Plus you need to cut inlets to a very high degree of accuracy or you will then have to bed a action to get it to fit properly (lazy way of a half assed job for Inletting in my book)
so the interaction between cad type design and the value of mesh type modelling is invaluable. Plus I came at this from a marksman perspective not a designers. So basically I have a blank page to start on!
@PhilProcarioJr doesn't show some of the stuff he has done on this forum.
What's left out can be only discribed as digital cad accurate ART!
It goes way beyond the standard cad world.
The one thing Phil, said to me in April.
"Open your mind and get as many digital tools you can"
It's clear that fusion hasent got it all yet. Maybe it will maybe it won't!
One thing is for sure. It could do.
But as this thread highlights fusion can facilitate a amazing work flow. But is just one tool in the box!
I would love to do a whole gun stock in t splines ultimately in fusion. But I'm unsure whether t spines can be driven by datums. For my requirement would be a datum model that is then altered to a customers requirements. That would make each rifle unique to the owner.
Can T splines be driven from a datum piont(s)? You can record a persons measurements but reflecting that into the finished design is a tricky one from my current knowlage stance!
I hope to learn what I need to to do that.