Looking to place two skadis panels 90 degrees from each other (in a corner - they are not attached to a wall, but rather the desk(top) mounting system sold by Ikea) - could I add the T-Clip System that you have designed to incorporate accommodate this endeavor?
@Hegs_273815, Oh! I see. I think it would certainly be possible. But only if you want the pegboard to hinge like this. I’d be curious to see the capabilities of that! I would probably make a new model that has a fixed angle unless you really need it to be hinged in this manner. Both are pretty fun project ideas!
@LineArcLine That makes sense! I should try to model my own with your interlock file. What is the best way to incorporate it; Fusion 360? Free software would be my hope. I am currently trying to learn OnShape with help from TeachingTech on YouTube.
@Hegs_273815 OnShape, Fusion360, and Solidworks all use the same mentality and workflow, so learning one is very similar to learning them all.
OnShape is currently the best in my opinion, but it gets very expensive once you don’t have a student license.
I use Fusion the most these days because I like the interface a lot and it can easily render your designs. It’s also the cheapest if I ever end up leaving school. It has a lot of problems, but I keep coming back to it. It’s also the most commonly used in the 3D-Printing community these days.
I would personally open the .f3d file in fusion and work from there, but you could import the .step files if you want to work in OnShape.
Looking to place two skadis panels 90 degrees from each other (in a corner - they are not attached to a wall, but rather the desk(top) mounting system sold by Ikea) - could I add the T-Clip System that you have designed to incorporate accommodate this endeavor?
@Hegs_273815 Sure, just mark it as a remix. But why did you post this comment on my flexure-based hinge model?
@LineArcLine I was asking if it would be possible to place the T-clip mount on this design so as to use it in the corner of 2 skadis boards.
@Hegs_273815, Oh! I see.
I think it would certainly be possible. But only if you want the pegboard to hinge like this. I’d be curious to see the capabilities of that!
I would probably make a new model that has a fixed angle unless you really need it to be hinged in this manner.
Both are pretty fun project ideas!
@LineArcLine That makes sense! I should try to model my own with your interlock file. What is the best way to incorporate it; Fusion 360? Free software would be my hope. I am currently trying to learn OnShape with help from TeachingTech on YouTube.
@Hegs_273815
OnShape, Fusion360, and Solidworks all use the same mentality and workflow, so learning one is very similar to learning them all.
OnShape is currently the best in my opinion, but it gets very expensive once you don’t have a student license.
I use Fusion the most these days because I like the interface a lot and it can easily render your designs. It’s also the cheapest if I ever end up leaving school. It has a lot of problems, but I keep coming back to it. It’s also the most commonly used in the 3D-Printing community these days.
I would personally open the .f3d file in fusion and work from there, but you could import the .step files if you want to work in OnShape.