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I finally got round to updating my boys wooden fork lift truck toy in Autodesk Inventor 2012.

 

These screenshots are taken with the Ray Tracing option turned on.

I finally got round to updating my boys wooden fork lift truck toy in Autodesk Inventor 2012.

 

These screenshots are taken with the Ray Tracing option turned on.

I took a picture of our 6 year olds desk in his bedroom and then added it as a background in Autodesk Inventor to show the forklift toy in it's true environment

 

The above is a screenshot of the Autodesk Inventor window - it is not a rendered image.

I added a string texture to the original model way back in Inventor R11 and was impressed with how it looked then.

 

Now with ray tracing in Inventor 2012 it looks so much like the real thing

Cdv by Ely of Brantford, Ontario.

James Dyson - inventor of the 'bagless' vacuum cleaner.

I like that the lenses make a little spot of light on the floor of the light tent. I was a bit worried I'd start a fire, what with the 300-watt bulb that lights that thing.

 

See how they look on here.

Inventors house from Dave Graffam models. This one took me a few evenings, its an order of magnitude more fiddly than the others I made for Malifaux terrain - the observatory dome in particular was a PitA.

 

A little rough in places but I'm pretty pleased with it overall and I think it has a slightly more steampunk vibe to it than the other more medieval buildings.

This is a School Building one my colleagues at Autodesk put together using Revit Architecture.

 

We then re-used the data in Autodesk Inventor to develop the required mechanical\manufacturing products.

DERNY es la marca del fabricante francés Roger DERNY.

La empresa se fundó en 1930 y cerró en 1958.

Fue el inventor del ciclomotor, utilizado durante mucho tiempo en Burdeos-París.

Su presentación tuvo lugar en Longchamps en 1938 (el día de la llegada del París-Tours) ante la Comisión de Deportes de la UVF.

El Derny se considera una máquina híbrida, mitad motocicleta ligera, mitad bicicleta.

Es un vehículo de dos ruedas, en el que un pequeño motor complementa el esfuerzo del ciclista.

Cuanto más se pedalea, más rápido gira el motor.

Su tamaño es similar al de una bicicleta.

La máquina está equipada con un depósito de combustible situado entre el manillar y la rueda delantera.

Se utilizó en

 

Cuadro de acero artesanal, equipada con motor ZURCHER, pistón de 2 tiempos con deflector, cilindrada de 90 cm³ y potencia de 2 CV a 2400 rpm.

Plato y bielas de acero con llaves, plato monoplato de 60 dientes. Pedales P.Lyotard con jaulas de acero dentadas, calapiés y correas Christophe.

Cambio trasero Cyclo, rueda libre Cyclo de 3 velocidades: 14-17-21. Manillar Philippe de acero cromado, puños de plástico.

Rueda delantera con cubierta Michelin-Cord 600 x 55 C y rueda trasera con cubierta Michelin-Tandem 650 x 50 B.

Frenos de tambor Super Brake Ideal.

Iluminación Ambassador Self 5W con dinamo France.

Sillín de cuero Terry con muelles.

Equipada con portaequipajes trasero, pata de cabra e inflador.

 

fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derny

 

www.moto-collection.org/moto-collection/fmd-moto-Derny-40...

Back in January 09 we finally cracked a problem that has been plaguing up for years. Namely how do you export Inventor files into a format that Cinema 4D can understand? After a lot of failed attempts we finally discovered a very clever bit of software called PolyTrans by Okino. A carefully written bid to the right people allowed us to buy the software that allows us to make the most of both apps. Inventor is used for most of the 3D modelling, C4D is used for lighting, texture mapping and rendering.

 

We expect to see more exciting results over the course of this session.

 

Autodesk Inventor Fusion has been available as a technology preview for a few years now but the 2012 version is now included with most of Autodesk geometry creation and simualtion tools.

 

Theres a great simplify tool (shown here) for working with data that needs simplifying for simulation and analysis

I was recently asked a question about sharing data via Autodesk Inventors BIM Exchange tool. The question was about material consistency from one to the other.

 

These two screenshots show the model in Inventor with textures and colours and the same thing in Revit when opening the .adsk file into Revit.

 

As you can see, they both have the same colours and textures applied!

A helping hand is never hard to find

This mouse was made for a 9th birthday present for a boy who is very into inventions, sellotape and rubber bands. I made the roll of sellotape using a thin strip of cardboard wrapped with thin strips of clear film built up to create a roll.

Paper manufacturing machine designed and visualised using Autodesk Inventor

Produced using Autodesk Inventor

Sadeq Qassem (Arab Inventor)

Benjamin Franklin

 

Located opposite City Hall Park, at the intersection of Park Row and the Brooklyn Bridge approach, this impressive sculpture of American statesman, scientist, inventor, philosopher, and journalist Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790) is by German-born sculptor Ernst Plassman (1823–1877). The sculpture was dedicated in 1872.

 

Franklin is one of the most extraordinary and influential figures in American history. Born in Boston, Massachusetts, he apprenticed to his brother James, a printer. After writing some satirical essays, he settled in Philadelphia in 1723 where he published the Pennsylvania Gazette (1730-48), and achieved widespread attention for his popular commentary in Poor Richard’s Almanack (1732-57). In 1727 he established a debating society known as Junto, which by the mid-1740s evolved into the American Philosophical Society. Also in the realm of intellectual pursuits, Franklin helped found the Academy of Philadelphia in 1751, which later became the University of Pennsylvania.

 

Possessing a nimble mind, Franklin left his mark on science and industry. His experiments with electricity include the oft-reported use of a kite as a conductor during a lightning storm. Some of his more practical inventions include an open stove for home heating (dubbed “the Franklin stove”), bi-focal eyeglasses, and the lightning rod.

 

Franklin was active extensively in matters of public affairs and government. He served as Deputy Postmaster General of the colonies from 1753 to 1774. At the Albany Congress of 1754, as a Pennsylvania delegate, Franklin was a forceful advocate for uniting the colonies. In 1775 he was an important member of the Second Continental Congress, served on the committee to draft the Declaration of Independence, and was a signer of this essential document in the establishment of the United States of America.

 

During the Revolutionary War Franklin was active in diplomatic affairs. He was one of three Colonial committee members who met at the Billop House (now the Conference House) on Staten Island’s south shore, and attempted, unsuccessfully, to arrive at a peaceful resolution to the mounting conflict with the British. In 1776 Franklin negotiated a treaty with France, and remained there as a diplomatic liaison until 1785, when he returned to Philadelphia. In his waning years Franklin served as president of the Pennsylvania executive council (1785-87) and was a member of the Constitutional Convention of 1787. He died on April 17, 1790 in Philadelphia.

 

This sculptural portrait of Franklin was commissioned as a gift to the City by Albert De Groot (1813–1884), a retired Hudson Valley steamboat captain. Park Row was for decades the center of New York’s publishing industry and newspaper businesses, and given Franklin’s activities as a printer of paper currency and publisher of newspapers and almanacs, the choice of location was particularly apt.

 

DeGroot had earlier collaborated with Plassman on the creation of the Cornelius Vanderbilt statue (1869), which stands in the viaduct in front of Grand Central Terminal. This colossal bronze effigy depicts Franklin in 18th-century dress, holding a copy of the Philadelphia Gazette. A second casting may be viewed in the lobby of the High School of Graphic Communication Arts at 439 West 49th Street. On January 17, 1872, the 166th anniversary of Franklin’s birth, the statue was formally unveiled in a lavish ceremony in which artist and inventor Samuel F. Morse (1791–1872) removed the shroud and newspaper publisher Horace Greeley (1811–1872) delivered the keynote address. Charles C. Savage, speaking on behalf of the New York Typographical Society, commented: “It is appropriate that this statue should be erected in this centre of our trade, in the very midst of our craft-work, instead of in Central Park; for Franklin’s life was devoted to practical hard work, rather than to the ornamental and the recreative.”

 

Today the sculpture stands in a small triangle, with Pace University as its backdrop. Having suffered from environmental corrosion, the statue was treated and restored by the Parks’ monuments crew on four occasions between the 1940s and the 1980s. In 1999 the City Parks Foundation Monuments Conservation Program, with funding from the Florence Gould Foundation, American Express Company, and Samuel H. Kress Foundation, conducted a complete conservation of the statue and its large granite pedestal. Today this portrait of an American icon, with renewed luster, maintains his watchful gaze over this crossroads of civic life.

I was recently asked a question about sharing data via Autodesk Inventors BIM Exchange tool. The question was about material consistency from one to the other.

 

These two screenshots show the model in Inventor with textures and colours and the same thing in Revit when opening the .adsk file into Revit.

 

As you can see, they both have the same colours and textures applied!

An image created as the result of contest #11 at the NAPP site. It's a self portrait of myself in a steampunk theme.

The addition of user created iLogic forms means it is really quick and easy to add a form to help automate your design

Here's my latest Lego Mindstorms Robot: a humanoid walker inspired by the iconic NXT Alpha Rex!

 

Video on Youtube:

youtu.be/wpLpnLu-Av4

Back in January 09 we finally cracked a problem that has been plaguing up for years. Namely how do you export Inventor files into a format that Cinema 4D can understand? After a lot of failed attempts we finally discovered a very clever bit of software called PolyTrans by Okino. A carefully written bid to the right people allowed us to buy the software that allows us to make the most of both apps. Inventor is used for most of the 3D modelling, C4D is used for lighting, texture mapping and rendering.

 

We expect to see more exciting results over the course of this session.

 

Produced using Autodesk Inventor

I'm working on a project with Autodesk colleagues from our Civil division and this is a concrete motorway gantry that I have put together based on the AutoCAD Civil3D road data.

 

This shows the geometry in Autodesk Inventor 2012 using the Image Based Lighting and Ray Tracing.

Dean Kamen is a well known American inventor.

 

He invented the AutoSyringe, a new type of mobile dialysis system for medical applications, the first insulin pump, and an all-terrain electric wheelchair known as the iBOT, using many of the same gyroscopic balancing technologies that later made their way into one of his best-known inventions, the Segway. See more at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dean_Kamen

 

This is a photo of him at IBM's Pulse conference showing an LED lightbulb.

Hill's Cigarettes "Inventors & Their Inventions" (series of 20 issued in 1907)

#6 Sir William Armstrong ~ The 110 ton gun

According to the inventor pedaling backwards is much more powerful and efficient than pedaling forwards.

 

Check out bakfiets-en-meer for lots of utility bike stuff from Amsterdam and elsewhere.

 

Escultura en la Ciudad de Guatemala.

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