Hi N.T.Fla
Sorry, this is off topic, but I just had to throw this in.
This whole design project of yours is so taking me back 35 years ago to when I was a 1st year journeyman patternmaker.
The company I went to did jobbing work for various car companies.
A couple of projects I did were injection seat molds for the Holden Cameria(Aust) made out of fiberglass resin composite and aluminium frame, and some car front window testing jigs, The glass guys would make a window then throw it on the jig I had made to test them for shape size and curvature before shipping them out to the replacement windscreen guys.
Back then all we were given was a blueprint with a series of arcs and a datum line with 20 or so points to set your vernier height gauges to, then blend it in.
There was one guy there who was the most experienced, and he was working on the pattern for the plastic injection mold for motorised side mirror controllers, supposedly the first on an Australian manufactured car, I can't remember which one.
It was something that has stuck in my mind, he was casting with epoxy resin fine tapered (or drafted)2 to 3 mm fins, webs and bosses into the back of the curved mirror holder as well as maintaining a smooth and constant body thickness.
He was on it for at least 5 to 6 weeks. ( maybe he was sending the boss broke :-)..... )
Really it should have been done half by a toolmaker and half by a pattern maker but I think the boss was calling in favors as we needed the work.
I imagine its the type of job today they would do using a 5 axis cnc and a block of aluminum in a couple of days now, and dimensionly perfect to the drawings.
I remember there was a wall with about 50-100, 5, 6, 7, 800mm long french, bezier, body builder curves Hanging on hooks(they had a name but I cant recall what it was) made from Phenolic resin about 50mm wide. It wasn't a full set but quite a lot of the set.
They were some sort of dimensionaly accurate curves used by the model makers for shaping body panels.
I was instructed that I wasn't allowed to casually touch them as they were worth thousands, (I wonder what happened to them)
I lasted there about a year and then they brought in something called the John button car plan.
Basically the government decided that about 13 car manufactures in Aust was way too many and unsustainable, so the plan was to cut it back to 3 or 4, something like, Toyota, Holden, Ford and Mitsubishi.
Well that was the end of a whole lot of work for the boss infact the whole engineering industry took a huge downturn.
There was a recession also starting to hit.
Out of 7 pattermakers 4 of us went straight away, he kept the most experienced 3 and survived for a while.
The boss and his wife started selling imported toys from the front workshop to make ends meet. (absolutely no lie)
After I was put off I went about 4 weeks with no job, I then found a job process working in a ceramic tile factory for a while because any job was a good job. :-)
And thanks to the Button car plan and the government of the time, that's how you set a "blueprint" for how you go about dumbing down a nation.
But any way, yes I am looking at all the blended curves you are trying to implement thinking just smooth it out with a bit of sandpaper, or build it up with a bit of bog or make a template to compare one side with the other.
Meshes, lofted surfaces, skins, nurbs and such are rather such nebulous things don't you think?
However I suppose these days we need to know mathematically where every surface point of every panel is so it can be CNCed.
Loving your project.
Edited by user Tuesday, January 23, 2018 5:55:38 AM(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified