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by Samtidsfobiker
767 days ago
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I too have wondered why it take so long to make stuff in CAD, and why even suggesting that everything should fit together the first time is laughable at best. My theory is that computers can't do rough sketching. No CAD software suite (I think) can iterate and evalute rough ideas as fast and flexible as whiteboard pen in a meeting room can. |
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Just as an example I am familiar with: so many people appear to begin a project like a MAME cabinet with SketchUp.
I like "Cardboard Assisted Design" and have literally built several MAME cabinet prototypes in cardboard where iteration is easy with merely a box-cutter knife.
When the ergonomics and part-fitting is "go", I take measurements from the cardboard proto and move to wood.
Designing acrylic parts for later laser-cutting I have also used "CAD" for prototyping — sometimes even flat-bed scanning the chipboard prototype and then moving to a vector drawing app to overlay the laser-friendly beziers.
Even for PCB layout I often will laser-print the PCB as a final sanity check: punching holes in the paper and shoving the actual electronic components in to see that everything will fit before I send the file off to Taiwan.