5 Essential Tips for BEGINNER Autodesk Inventor users!

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Tech3D

Tech3D

Күн бұрын

New to Autodesk Inventor? Here are 5 tips and a few honorable mentions for things you should probably know about before sinking your teeth into the 3D CAD world.
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Пікірлер: 44
@Neil3D
@Neil3D 5 жыл бұрын
Timestamps: 1:26 Tip 1 | Parts & Assemblies 3:24 Tip 2 | End of Part 5:35 Tip 3 | iProps & BOM Data 9:35 Tip 4 | File Locations 12:13 Tip 5 | Sketching Ideology 15:36 Honorable Mention 1 | Don't do too much too soon 17:02 Honorable Mention 2 | Program Settings 18:02 Honorable Mention 3 | PC quality 19:14 Honorable Mention 4 | Just play around! Experiment!
@JRF032
@JRF032 5 жыл бұрын
Thanks Neil- You always deliver great content in a clear manner, appreciated!
@vincenzodirigano4481
@vincenzodirigano4481 5 жыл бұрын
Awesome, thanks for bringing all this epic content. Furthermore, I love the style a lot.
@EB-zn4hs
@EB-zn4hs 5 жыл бұрын
This back-to-basics video is a great idea. I hope it becomes a series.
@abdullah5465
@abdullah5465 3 жыл бұрын
So glad I found this channel.
@niallms83
@niallms83 4 жыл бұрын
I'm just starting a new CAD job using Inventor and your videos have been extremely helpful. I have a background in Solidworks and I'm really enjoying using Inventor so far. Thanks for the great content!
@leewaggers4733
@leewaggers4733 Жыл бұрын
Great series of video's really helpful - cheers.
@76aussieguy
@76aussieguy 4 жыл бұрын
cheers mate, really appreciate your vids
@mbhoward
@mbhoward 5 жыл бұрын
As usual, a great bunch of tips clearly explained. I’ll second the last honorable mention of just play around. For all the intensive classes you can take or the books you can read there’s no better way to get comfortable with the program than sitting down at the keyboard and start actually using Inventor. Click around, pick something you see nearby, and try to model it. I see you chose your laptop, for me, it was the clock on he wall. I found clicking the buttons and drawing served to reinforce the formal learning, as well as remove the initial ‘mystery’ around the whole program. Thanks again!
@crazyman6crazyman639
@crazyman6crazyman639 5 жыл бұрын
dude. I've been watching your vids for almost a year now, and holy crap it has helped me out sooo much. Last year in my robotics team we used a software called PTC Creo Parametric. IT SUCKS! I decided to CAD everything in Inventor because it was free for students and it felt more professional. I ended up just designing the various subsystems of the robot in Inventor and converted them into PTC files. I honestly couldn't have done it without your vids. Most if not all of the other inventor videos out there are either outdated or difficult to unerstand. Thanks!!!
@Paul-Maven
@Paul-Maven 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Very cool!
@chrisose
@chrisose 5 жыл бұрын
"Just play around" is really the best way to learn almost everything. It is how I taught myself AutoCad (started with v12) and now Inventor (with the assistance of your videos). I actually had Inventor on my machine for a while before I forced myself to design a project with it. The hardest thing was trying to forget the workflow from AutoCad while working in Inventor since they are definitely different beasts. That was just under a year ago and I am currently running 3 projects out of Inventor (I am writing this as I wait on a stress analysis on a big assembly to complete) and I switch between Inventor and AutoCad almost seamlessly. Though I do admit to doing more complex sketches in AutoCad then importing them into Inventor as the sketch tools in Inventor still feel clunky to me. As always thank you for your hard work in sharing your knowledge.
@ryanninjutsu
@ryanninjutsu Жыл бұрын
ooh my god, how are you now ? 4 years and now you should be very good using inventor... i got the exact same case as you right now, trying so hard to learn inventor and forget the workflow from autocad, since i also taught myself autocad by playing around... and now i also forced myself to work the project using inventor rather than autocad. how you think ? is inventor is much better than autocad for 3D mechanical drawing and assembling ? ooohhh how i would like to message and learn directly from you, i really got the same issue now moving to learn inventor, hahaha
@chrisose
@chrisose Жыл бұрын
@@ryanninjutsu I do most of my work in Inventor but I will leave it up to others as to whether or not I am "very good" at it. To answer your question, yes Inventor is far superior for mechanical drawings and assemblies. If you haven't already I suggest you run through Neil's back catalogue of Inventor videos. Pay special attention to setting up your parts and assemblies with "best practices" because this will keep your files from getting away from you. Also, force yourself to integrate the parametric features. Taking a little extra time at the beginning of your drawings can save you hours when you need to make changes. If you want to ask me questions, feel free to post them here. If I don't respond quickly please don't take it personally. When I get busy it might be a couple of weeks before I even open KZfaq to see what is going on.
@ryanninjutsu
@ryanninjutsu Жыл бұрын
@@chrisose thank you very much for your reply!! now you're the catalyst for me to learn inventor, investing my time to learn the software, i was always going back and forth and not sure if i have to learn this since im quite good with autocad, but i do feel limited in 3D designing because of autocad (or maybe its just my inadequate skill). anyway, im going to learn inventor and do what you suggest to run through neil's back catalogue of inventor videos... so im usually design the whole part at once in autocad, but in inventor ? we must do it 1 by 1 ? part per part ? many thanks for your reply once again, glad you're helping, its very okay if you're busy
@chrisose
@chrisose Жыл бұрын
@@ryanninjutsu While it is possible to build out a complex part entirely within a part file (.ipt), the power of Inventor comes in being able to design your project to mimic the real world where parts are assembled to make complex components that are themselves a part of an even more complex whole. And despite the fact that your models can end up extremely complex, you will still have the ability to edit the simplest parts. And if you have taken the time to link all your files properly, edits made to a simple part will automatically make necessary changes to associated components through the entire model.
@ryanninjutsu
@ryanninjutsu Жыл бұрын
@@chrisose i see, thank you so much for your insight! i could imagine im drawing complex machinery with inventor, but right now i still learning and practicing with inventor and by neils youtube tutorial. still not use it for my real project yet... but i want to ask your opinion, since i also accept freelance 3D mechanical design sometimes, the part requested sometimes is not too complex, sometime its just 1 simple brackets of something. how you think using inventor for that kind of task ? or its okay for me to just use autocad ? i don't have any problem doing these simple task in autocad
@dennisrussell9238
@dennisrussell9238 4 жыл бұрын
I am new at this, going to school for Mechanical Engineering and we are now studying and using Autodesk Inventor. I will have to admit that this is way easier to use than Creo Parametric. I love your videos and thanks for the tips.
@patrickredlich3045
@patrickredlich3045 5 жыл бұрын
Great work Neil. I've learned a lot over the last 2+ years from your channel plus a lot of trying as you mentioned. But Tip4 is epic for my recent project. Thank you mate. p.s mention the Patreon a bit more, I recently discovered it when I thought "there must be a way to donate this guy a drink or so" 👍
@Neil3D
@Neil3D 5 жыл бұрын
Thanks Patrick, very much appreciated! I don't like to peddle it too much as it's easy to come off as having skewed motives - but yea I think I'll just drop a passing mention at the end of videos now, thanks very much for the support!
@luscus9754
@luscus9754 5 жыл бұрын
Whoops, should have added that I enjoy watching the vids and dream about being able to use Inventor. Thanks for the GREAT tips, tutorials and banter. MInd you I am a bit of a one eyed fan.
@kevin_delaney
@kevin_delaney 5 жыл бұрын
Dear God.....I have used Fusion with the "Capture Design History" and whatnot and I have legitimately been saying for....a solid (HA!) year that Inventor needs that feature....Mind...Blown... I had to actually pause the video after that and let that sink in. I have wasted SO MUCH TIME!!! Hahaha. Good God, I wish I had known that sooner. That right there makes me think you really should make that 50 tip video haha. I know that isn't what you want to hear...but my brain just exploded and it is only the second tip...kinda nervous for the rest XD File management is absolutely an issue for me, it is good to see how I should be doing that with project files. One of the most useful lessons you taught me in your "Inventor in under an hour" video was to keep every single sketch as simple as possible. I remember trying to design the whole part in one sketch when I first started and it was just an epic fail. I find myself always saying to myself "Keep It Simple Stupid" (KISS) in your accent, "Keep your sketches as simple as possible, do not be afraid of a bunch of different sketches to shape the solid into the shape you want." Some of my sketches are simply triangles or a hex only to extrude a nut "pocket" or hex shape cut into a solid so I can 3D print a part and simply put a nut in and easily joint pieces together. A lot of my sketches are very simple and I tend to have quite a lot of them and it just makes designing complex parts so much easier when you learn how to think decompositionally. "Start with the end in mind." The number of sketches DOES NOT MATTER, use as many as you feel are necessary. Even to this day I try adding too much into one sketch, keep it simple, simple is brilliant. I wish you would do more videos with assemblies, you have done a lot, I do not want to imply you haven't done enough or a lot. I am trying to create an assembly now and I am designing pretty much everything so if I want to design a bracket to 3D print or CNC machine out of metal, I find myself wanting to design a part in an assembly because I have to design a part based off of certain frame constraints. For example, the center slot and internal T-Slot style groove of extruded aluminum to get a nice snug fit, like this: us.misumi-ec.com/vona2/mech/M1500000000/M1501000000/M1501010000/ or similar where the new design must work with predefined geometry that cannot (or should not) be altered. In those scenarios, I think back to your "Inventor in under an hour" video (which I have gone over many times) and I feel like the way I am going about it is not the best way to go about it. I am getting better at designing individual parts, creating original parts to fit together flawlessly in an assembly is certainly a wall for me. Something in the back of my mind, I want to say it is you that said it but cannot remember, keeps telling me to stop trying to create a sketch in an assembly or subassembly when I am trying to make a new component for that assembly. I find myself stopping because I am under the assumption I am going about it the wrong way. I am not looking for individual support for my problems, just to be clear. This is a problem that I struggle with and I imagine if I struggle with it, I have a hard time believing I am the only one struggling the further into assemblies one gets. I know, I know, "Inventor is a hugely complex subject..." It is a massive suite, it really is. It is hard not to be intimidated and discouraged and/or disheartened by the sheer scale of the problem that is learning Inventor. In all seriousness, with how much time I spend in Inventor and how incompetent I still feel I am, I genuinely question whether three years in school is enough time. The certification exams require a minimum of what? 400 hours? I don't even know how hany hours I have in Inventor anymore. 400 hours is roughly a little over an hour per day, everyday, for one year. I easily have double, maybe even triple, that and I still feel grossly incompetent in Inventor. I would genuinely be so incredibly lost without your channel. Thank You so much for what you do. On a side note, from one man to another, ya look damn good, no homo.
@lordgoader
@lordgoader 5 жыл бұрын
Great videos! So glad I found this channel. I have been using inventor about 4 months now every day at work. Is there any videos about creating IDW drawings from the IAM files? Cheers!
@martintruran8469
@martintruran8469 5 жыл бұрын
The best presenter of anything, anywhere. Thanks. I'll bet you could even explain female logic!
@Neil3D
@Neil3D 5 жыл бұрын
I probably could, thumbs up if you want that as the next video ;-) haha What a random video that would be for TFI!
@martintruran8469
@martintruran8469 5 жыл бұрын
TFI - CAD & Technology For Industry well it would bring a whole new meaning to "every button explained"! Huge thanks again though for making these uploads, I'm volunteering with local primary schools to get them interested in 3d printing and engineering but despite my engineering history I'm pretty average at inventor- I'm not sure I'd be doing it without your assistance. Plus, your content is the only engineering related stuff that my wife will allow me to play on the big screen in the house!
@jaySy200
@jaySy200 5 жыл бұрын
The first thing I change before even starting to learn sketches was reverse zoom direction.
@Neil3D
@Neil3D 5 жыл бұрын
Even if I reverse it, I always still go the other way first, doesn't matter which way around I have it my stupid brain goes the other way first!
@jodybressi7957
@jodybressi7957 5 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for your channel Neil. I'm hoping to do freelance Inventor like you do after I pass the certified pro exam. I was going to install a student version and was a bit worried I would need to invest in a better computer, but after hearing your advice about not fussing over hardware too much I've decided to just pull the trigger and do it. It's what I need for practice and get up to speed for the exam without spending the 2+ grand for a single seat. Appreciate you very much. Wish me luck!!
@jodybressi7957
@jodybressi7957 5 жыл бұрын
Neil. My computer failed to install the Inventor 2019 program. Only 8g of hardware space available so I assume that was the problem. Anyhow. Question. Do you think the Intel Core i7 - 16GB Memory - 1TB Hard Drive + 128GB Solid State Drive will adequately run the 2019 version? Would appreciate your feedback if you get time.
@michaelkellam9903
@michaelkellam9903 5 жыл бұрын
Do you have an advanced I properties video?
@DB-gf1kt
@DB-gf1kt 3 жыл бұрын
You said that you designed the laptop you were working on, so I have a question about that. I want to remake certain objects in inventor as well, however, I have no idea how to see all the parts, I don't know how to measure everything. Do you find references online with all the measurements? Or how does this work? Because so far I've been creating objects with no clear or correct data, so I'm interested to see how to even start.
@thorjarlberglund997
@thorjarlberglund997 2 жыл бұрын
I cannot extrude my objects 2.5mm :D ? Tryuing with simple circle. I am normally using Rhino and its this should be easy
@selorius28
@selorius28 5 жыл бұрын
want someone to do a coil fleur de lys to fix all mutation & treat all diseases and to resurrecting the dead ???
@josebraga78
@josebraga78 3 жыл бұрын
Bets inventor content on youtube so far
@luscus9754
@luscus9754 5 жыл бұрын
Sadly my laptop doesn't like most Autodesk software. Fusion 360, Inventor and even DWG Viewer causes the BSOD. I am stuck still using 123 Design which runs quite happily. Laptop is a Toshiba i7, 32GB RAM, NVIDIA GT930M and SSD so should be OK. Haven't found a solution anywhere. Hardware tests all pass.
@chrisose
@chrisose 5 жыл бұрын
Sounds like your system kernel is still running 32 bit. Pretty much everything in the Autodesk line up requires full 64bit support.
@luscus9754
@luscus9754 5 жыл бұрын
Windows 10 64 bit is installed.
@henrychan720
@henrychan720 3 жыл бұрын
File>Option>Display>View transition time>0.1seconds Thank me later
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