Please post here anything else (not relating to Maxwell technical matters)
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By w i l l
#363333
I've just started using Rhino at a new company. I wish I used this earlier.... no more Solidworks hopefully. Anyway I was wondering if I could get some advice on the best way to animate or setup animations. Is it good to use Bongo? Does that work OK with the Maxwell plugin? Or is it best to use another bit of software like 3DS? The animations probably wont be that complex, mostly zooms, rotates and some of the products will have oving parts... rotating wheels for example.
By raja
#363335
For basic animation (turntable) I have used standard animation available in Rhino (fly through, turntable, path, one-day-sun-study), and this works fine with Maxwell.
I recently got interested again in Bongo, as they have new features and Bongo 2.0 WIP is available to try. I tested it once, and mxs are being exported, but rendering did not start automatically... have to test it more. Are you new to Rhino?
User avatar
By w i l l
#363338
raja wrote:For basic animation (turntable) I have used standard animation available in Rhino (fly through, turntable, path, one-day-sun-study), and this works fine with Maxwell.
I recently got interested again in Bongo, as they have new features and Bongo 2.0 WIP is available to try. I tested it once, and mxs are being exported, but rendering did not start automatically... have to test it more. Are you new to Rhino?
Thanks. Yeah my first day.
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By NicoR44
#363396
In the past I've done some animations in Rhino but just with the basic Rhino tools, I also tried Bongo, but that was many years ago, at that time the interface was not intuitive at all, it's probably better now but I'm glad I'm using Solid Works now, it's like Rhino on steroids, with a history tree that can be edited and edited and edited when needed :)
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By w i l l
#363440
NicoR44 wrote:In the past I've done some animations in Rhino but just with the basic Rhino tools, I also tried Bongo, but that was many years ago, at that time the interface was not intuitive at all, it's probably better now but I'm glad I'm using Solid Works now, it's like Rhino on steroids, with a history tree that can be edited and edited and edited when needed :)
Ha you're the opposite to me... I see Solidworks as a kind of Rhino on sleeping pills. It's good for engineering and basic design but you can't do anything complex with surfaces... have you tried T-Splines for Rhino? Also tsElements is useful for going to Solidworks. If Rhino had a parametric history for everything it would be perfect... and I think they're adding more record history options with each update. There are a lot of interesting plugins as well.

Depends on the application though. I'm modelling quite organic products at the moment so Rhino is better for that.
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By NicoR44
#363450
Because when using Silo 3d I can get a real lean and clean unsmoothed mesh, and in Silo it's much easier to model when modelling organic shapes (for me that is)
By Ha_Loe
#363818
w i l l wrote:If Rhino had a parametric history for everything it would be perfect...
With Grasshopper everything in Rhino has a parametric history ...on steroids even.

Ok, you can't record Grasshopper history from the Rhino viewport...
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By NicoR44
#363825
Grasshopper indeed looks pretty interesting! I have been watching a webinar just now.
By Ha_Loe
#363884
NicoR44 wrote:Grasshopper indeed looks pretty interesting! I have been watching a webinar just now.
It is... especially since there's a Maxwell add-on ;)

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