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My ResBaz CADdventure

Guest post by engineering student Mr.Tony Zahtila. Tony is now employed by Veolia thanks to his ResBaz experience.

Hi! I’m Tony and I was a part of the ResBaz CAD teaching team for 2015.

The CAD skills I learnt as a part of the program have since been helpful in creating virtual constructions of the work I do. The best part of using CAD in my work, it’s how cheap my mistakes have become. Sketching up my work and creating a 3D model allows me to visualise what I’m trying to build in the workshop. If I’ve miscalculated a length, or overlooked a geometry, I just change the design specs and I’m ready to build. A nice short-cut to the laborious task of finding what I’ve ordered doesn’t actually assemble. 

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The software is far-reaching and I can see applications for CAD skills in many fields. If engineers are to become digital blacksmiths, doctors can become digital plumbers. Organs can go flying around on the monitors of health professionals, all towards a better understanding of our bodies, or a doctor’s slightly-alarming idea of fun.. 3D models of the human body would allow for an alternative to the difficult to obtain cadavers with exploded views of our bodies, as well as clarity, versatility, and interaction that’s just not possible with the traditional textbook.

There’s many variations of CAD software and the form it finds itself in use with engineers is not necessarily what the software will look like to other professionals. Pulling and stretching apart, dividing into blocks, sculpting towards roundness, and smoothing coarse materials to see their altered appearance, all of these things can be achieved with CAD software as the focal point.

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I believe that the way of the future is interaction between until-now disjointed fields. The distinct lines between medicine, engineering, law, commerce, art, carpentry, and so on, they’ll blur. Communication between the fields will continue to grow as an integral skill. It’s not compulsory that you have an interest in becoming a CAD expert to gain from the course. Knowing the fundamentals will put you in good stead to clearly communicate with a CAD professional who can advance your work. An artist could have a realistic expectation and understanding as to the how their aesthetic piece could be re-worked into a digital symphony of polygons. The possibilities for experimentation are there and very accessible.

The ResBaz team are very friendly and it’s as much a sharpening of CAD skills for students as it is a festival of ideas between people who see the world with different lenses. I was challenged when I heard a visual artist, who had been taking the course and exchanging ideas as part of the group, ask whether it would be possible to ‘pull out’ a corner of a model. To visualise what was being described, imagine pinching some Playdoh and tugging on it to see how it stretches. I’d never thought of this in my exact and neat world of CAD use, I’d hitherto seen CAD as more of a program for making machine recipes.

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ResBaz is a fun and engaging environment. People are very friendly and I was able to get along with all the smiling faces and people who were excited to share their own work and to learn from others. I’d highly recommend the CAD course to both people who want to develop their skills into a powerful technique to add to their repertoire, as well as, people who want to understand the basics so they are aware and able to work in a team with CAD professionals.

    • #tony
    • #aliza
    • #vincent
    • #paul
    • #autodesk
    • #inventor
    • #cad
    • #cae
    • #digismith
    • #sharksden
    • #researchtranslation
    • #employment
    • #cadventure
    • #nnovation
  • 3 years ago
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We Came. We Saw. We CAD(ed)

by Paul Mignone

In July and August this year, we at @resbaz did a university first. Over six weeks, we ran a series of ‘alpha’ Computer Aided Design (CAD) workshops to over a hundred Melbourne School of Engineering students. For quite a few years, there has been growing interest from engineering students at the university for providing opportunities to learn and develop CAD skills.

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The calm before the storm…

This has been mainly due to employers expecting engineering students to have these skills upon graduation. In addition, students have greater access to 3D printing resources, giving them opportunities fabricate many of their projects. Therefore with the help of Dr. Colin Burvill, and some awesome people from MUR Motorsports, we taught a series of one-day Solidworks CAD courses.

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The CAD workshops were a full house every Saturday!

Each class was followed up with a feedback session, where we incorporated student feedback into the course for the next iteration. By the end of the six weeks, we had a series of modules which quickly and effectively taught part design, assembly setup and engineering drawing within a single day. A draft of the course can be freely-downloaded here.

Creating sketches in Solidworks #resbaz #digismith https://t.co/KduBFyKoZm

— Fiona Tweedie (@FCTweedie)
August 22, 2014

CAD in the Vine!

Once again, without the help of some fantastic people from MUR, this course would not have been possible. They are as follows:

Jacob (a.k.a Squishy) teaching part design!

Squishy on the #solidworks vine #digismith #resbaz https://t.co/s4HoQXYdkc via @vineapp

— Paul Mignone (@paulmignone)
August 23, 2014

Darcy teaching applied part design and reverse engineering!

Darcy on the #solidworks vine #resbaz #digismith #cad https://t.co/GX0z396KGc

— Paul Mignone (@paulmignone)
August 23, 2014

Alex teaching engineering drawing!

Alex shows us #solidworks drawings on the vine #resbaz #cad #digismith https://t.co/3WPuLPCr2z

— Paul Mignone (@paulmignone)
August 23, 2014

Clarke teaching assembly modelling…by assembling Lego!

Clarke shows #lego on the #solidworks vine #resbaz #digismith #cad https://t.co/FUvt4qWtQe

— Paul Mignone (@paulmignone)
August 23, 2014

So what’s next for CAD at UniMelb? Plenty. With the ResBaz conference around the corner, we have a series of CAD classes around Autodesk Inventor an Civil3D designed to grow and develop the local community of CAD users at UniMelb. Stay tuned for details…

Best.#Lego.#Solidworks.Model.Ever #resbaz #digismith #cad https://t.co/XfNMXAnC1R .@SOLIDWORKS .@Dassault3DS

— Paul Mignone (@paulmignone)
August 23, 2014

Best.Lego.Model.Ever.Clarke

    • #paul
    • #resbaz
    • #digismith
    • #cad
    • #cae
    • #unimelb
    • #3dprinting
  • 4 years ago
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Yes We CAD!

By Paul Mignone, Dejan Jotanovic & Dr. Colin Burvill

It’s been a long time coming and now it’s here! The first (of many) dedicated Computer-Aided Design (CAD) training workshops for engineering students at the University of Melbourne. For those that don’t know. CAD is a piece of software allowing you to design and modify your own 2D or 3D Computer-Aided Design (it’s really all in the name). Users are enabled to sharpen the quality of their designs, establish databases and record their progress through documentation. 

But the fun of CAD is watching your 3D model come to life…enter 3D Printing. Letting your 3D model gather dust seems like too much of a waste when considering that the University of Melbourne’s Engineering Workshop houses around ten beautiful 3D Printers. So, you may ask, what are the possibilities?

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CAD helps you unleash your inner designer! (Source)

Between CAD and 3D Printing, the possibilities are endless. Do you love to skate? Why not print your own skateboard? Broken hand? 3D Printing has you (or perhaps it) covered. CAD modeling & printing has even been successful in building a woman’s hip! For engineering students, this class will get you started on developing a highly valuable skill set for your engineering or research careers. These skills will also be handy when designing models for your Warman (MCEN30014), gearbox (MCEN90013), mechatronic design (MCEN90024) and Capstone (MCEN90022) projects, as well as any models you need to 3D print.

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CAD animation of a Subaru EJ25 engine (Source)

The first classes will be taught using Solidworks, and will be held on Saturdays (9am - 5pm) in the Alice Hoy building. Please select one of the links below to register. Please note that you MUST be a University of Melbourne Engineering student or staff member to register. In the first instance, priority will be given to students within the Department of Mechanical Engineering. 

  • Saturday, July 26th (9am - 5pm)
  • Saturday, August 9th (9am - 5pm)
  • Saturday, August 23rd (9am - 5pm)

Thanks to the fantastic efforts of Dr. Colin Burvill, the Melbourne School of Engineering and ITS research services, we can finally say: Yes, we can! Yes, we CAD!

    • #3dprinting
    • #CAD
    • #CAE
    • #digismith
    • #Resbaz
    • #paul
    • #dejan
  • 4 years ago
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