The Shed

STATE OF THE ART

In this last of our six-part series of articles on 3D printing we look at a second CAD design application: Fusion 360.

Together with Tinker CAD (discussed last issue, No. 79), Fusion 360 by Autodesk is the most useful professional CAD design for 3D printing, and also includes features for rendering and animation. It would impossible to discuss all the features of the application here; however, it is important to discuss what we should expect from Fusion 360, how the programme can interact with the user, and where we should focus our attention to get the best results.

As well as the commercial licence, which may be expensive for students or hobbyists, Autodesk has a free three-year student licence available. This is the licencing method that made this 3D design software so popular with the 3D-printing community.

Interacting and cooperating

As a registered user, you have access to the entire community — this means that you can share ideas and designs, get access to

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Shed

The Shed3 min read
Menzshed New Zealand
Sheds and their members decide the projects to undertake. However most sheds throughout New Zealand take on some community projects, examples include repairing toy library stock, building playgrounds for early learning centres, repairing old bikes fo
The Shed7 min read
The Best Hut Ever!
My six-year-old grandson, Mars, has been diagnosed as autistic. With his birthday coming up, I decided to build him a hut – one that could go outside or in the garage; one where he could do whatever he wanted to and it wouldn’t be a problem. Mars lik
The Shed7 min read
Small Is Big In Bill Thomas’s Shed
We walk into Bill Thomas’s Waikanae Beach house through his shed. The trestle tables in the shed are filled with things Bill plans to show us but they have dust-sheets over them for now. Inside his home, a tiny house awaits. The tiny-house project is

Related Books & Audiobooks