Hi,
Can I design a rocket house in inventor?
thanks,
kas
kelly.young has edited your subject line for clarity: Rocket design
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Hi! Based on the way you ask the question, you are a student right? Is this a school project or your own project? Regardless, I suggest you first need to learn how to use Inventor. There is a lot of online resource to learn. Below is a starting point.
https://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/inventor-products
Once you are familiar with Inventor, you can explore various design and you will find the answer yourself. If you are not interested in learning to use Inventor, I suggest you find a different tool. Inventor is one of the most popular mechanical design tools in the world. Once you learn to use it, you will be able to use other professional-grade MCAD tools fairly easily.
Many thanks!
Hello @Anonymous I see that you are visiting as a new member to the Inventor Forum.
Welcome to the Autodesk Community!
If you can embed a screenshot, record a screencast , or attach your parts with Pack & Go as .zip to clarify your design intent that would be helpful for other users to investigate and provide feedback.
Please select the Accept as Solution button if a post solves your issue or answers your question.
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Hi @kelly.young
Thanks for the welcome
I work for a prefab company and I'm looking to design a prototype as in the picture below.
I've been experimenting with Inventor and Revit for quite sometime, but not able to get the polygon modeling to work as expected.
Any feedback on how to design is appreciated.
Hi
Hi! I think the model can be easily built on Inventor. We have customers building real world models like this. For a medium-level user, it will take a day or two. An expert can get it done within a few hours. You can use a single part to model the whole thing or you can build individual parts. I don't see any difficulty here. Please attach your attempt here so forum experts can guide you further.
Many thanks!
@Anonymous Thanks for attaching the image, much more clear. Are you trying to build this using the Sheet Metal tools within Inventor?
This definitely looks like something that can be achieved it just depends on the design intent.
If you can attach the part with Pack & Go of what you have done so far or show a screencast of where you are stuck that would be helpful.
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Interesting .......It is possible to do in Inventor. Just curious, are the horizontal pieces made of individual wood pieces? Will you have to detail each joint?
Thats a lot of different pieces.
It looks like you should be able to reuse a number of pieces as well as treating each of the side panels as sub assemblies and reusing these.
I might even consider Authoring to Frame Generator some dimensional wooden shapes to use for this.
I might consider doing this in Frame Generator and using a simple extrude octagonal surface to control the main shape of the model.
This is what I've have so far:
Hope it doesn't look like a iron-box
I cannot get to edit the sketch to get wood panels.
err... what? Thats really challenging my brain today to comprehend how that is anything like what you have shown in the image above..
One of the best tips about Inventor is keep it as real to life as possible.. If you want a table in the real world you make a leg part (4 times) and a tabletop part..
Then you assemble them together..
This should be the same.. Thats totally an assembly of multiple flat sheets of plywood or something so model it as such in Inventor..
Did a quick Google "search by image" of the rocket and found this: https://paulsplayhouses.com/products/rippin-rocketship-playhouse-plan
Images from the webpage:
Should be very helpful to everyone.
@Anonymous depending on your experience and how advanced you want to get, here is a post with many good examples that might be helpful.
Collection of ilogic models for beginners: Playset
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@Anonymous, below is an image showing how I would probably break up the rocket. Each color is a unique sub-assembly which can be re-used multiple times.
The basic breakdown is:
As for the modeling itself, I would personally use multibody modeling. You can google this to look into it.
That's just how I personally would do it after a quick digest of the overall assembly. Other people would do it differently and no one way is "the right way". But some will likely be better than others (including mine) for your application.
I'd be curious to hear if others know of a good parametric way to pattern the decreasing sizes of panels in the upper and lower sections. The middle one is easy, just a pattern of the same panel. But the top and bottom may be a little trickier.
Doesn't look too complicated @kelly.young will post an image of his finished design tomorrow.
I think the most time will be spent on deciding how to do the support framing under the floors with consideration of the trap doors (and the trap doors themselves) and around the cut windows.
I would start with a Hex for the concrete slab, work my way up creating one example of each part (multi-body) and then a bunch of Patterns.
BTW @DRoam great research in discovering that this is a plan that can be purchased. Surely that information should have been disclosed in the original problem statement. I would give you 10 Kudos - if we could still give Kudos.
@Anonymous if you are the manufacturers do you have the plans for the rocket ship that they are selling on the site?
If you already have a cut list the easiest way would be to draw each piece as a part and constrain within an assembly.
What is the future use of the model within the manufacturing method, meaning should it be parametric to change sizes?
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@Anonymous wrote:This is a commercial project, we are the manufacturers.
In that case - I can help you learn Inventor step-by-step.
There are several different ways of doing the design. Given that you are the manufacturer I would do as a complete iAssembly, but that is too advanced for your current experience.
So let's start with a simplified method.
On the Top (XZ) Plane sketch and dimension a hexagon octagon.
Zip and Attach your *.ipt file here for the next step. (This simple first step will tell me a lot about how to proceed with my instructions.)
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