I had to refresh myself. This was a great video to follow. Thank you!
@cademist5 күн бұрын
You are very welcome!
@Denis_v1.0_beta9 күн бұрын
I'm still learning Onshape (and CAD generally), but found this video extremely educational. Thank you.
@cademist8 күн бұрын
Great to hear!
@mlaflecheCAD29 күн бұрын
Nice part studio and use of mate connectors to get things positioned!!!!
@cademist29 күн бұрын
Wow-you are fast! I just published this! Thx.
@paolococo799029 күн бұрын
Grazie mille per i tuoi Tutorials e la tua condivisione. 👍
@cademist29 күн бұрын
Mi fa piacere sapere che apprezzi il mio lavoro.
@PadraigDennehy-h9v29 күн бұрын
Thanks from a school in Dublin
@cademist29 күн бұрын
Hello to Dublin! (seeing your profile, this might be a cabinet-maker-school!?)
@PadraigDennehy-h9v26 күн бұрын
@@cademist No it's a regular secondary school that uses onshape llike a lot of schools in Ireland. It's just that we have made some French trestles in the past which is considered Carpentry as opposed to Cabinet making.
@tar244you829 күн бұрын
i went from designing a mug for my very object in cad on a free student account to then 2 months later making a jet engine with all of the vanes and airfoils then making a working rocket for my project in school then recently joined college i gave up with on shape because i guess only good for sheet metal so im now making a working jet engine on solid works no hate to on shape but solid works has better integration and compatibility
@cademist29 күн бұрын
SolidWorks is definitely a powerful tool for complex mechanical designs. However, Onshape has its own strengths, especially for collaborative projects and cloud-based workflows. It really depends on your specific needs and preferences.