TLDR = what’s a good next step after kid-friendly 3d creation tools?
Solved = Fusion360 is voted as winner, we even got a nice tutorial playlist.

Hi all - I’m still very much a new user. Highly skilled in IT but just getting my feet wet in 3D printing, since a month or so. I love the possibilities! I can physically create anything I can image, it’s amazing.

So far, I’ve used mostly TinkerCad and done lots with it. The learning curve is practically non-existent, and it has sufficient features to do a lot.

But of course it’s not perfect. Obvious example: can’t do fillets, except in roundabout ways using negative blocks.

I’ve tried OnShape, OpenScad, Fusion 360, but found them quite a steep hill to climb.

Are these good choices, or is there something in-between that would make it easier for me to advance?

  • @PlutoniumAcidOP
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    1 year ago

    An hour later?? Either you have a really fast printer, or you build really small things 😅 My MINI+ needs longer than that for a matchbox. But yes, 3D printing is as mind-blowing as color TV, or the first time I used a scanner in the early 90’s.

    manipulating the view - yes, I agree with you on that, too. The mouse-scroll-to-zoom works the wrong way round (compared to every other tool I’ve tried, or even compared to friggin’ Google Maps) and it irks me that there’s no setting for something as fundamental as that. Also turning my viewpoint needs **Shift+**middle-mouse-button, which is immensely annoying. I might fire up some custom-made AutoHotkey scripts to tune that.

    That mouse is awesome … if you’re literally a rocket scientist. For home use, it’s way out of my league.