On Fri, 21 Dec 2012 17:45:10 +0000 (UTC), Jim <
j...@abcdefg.com> wrote:
>Rich Webb wrote:
>
>> There is no single "best" without specifying evaluation criteria
>
>I agree. But, for example, the 2D program suggested is pretty darn
>good for most of us. In general, a very small set of "really good"
>freeware programs exist for most things we need to do.
>
>> The magic bullet that you're looking for, the ability to automatically
>> convert a 2D drawing into a 3D object, isn't there now and probably
>> never will be.
>
>There are always two magic bullets needed:
>a) Conversion of PDF to CAD (e.g., to DWF or DXF)
>b) Conversion of 2D to 3D
When I make a 3D object based on a typical PDF datasheet, I usually just
use the reader's "snapshot" tool to put a bitmap of the more-or-less
(usually "less") dimensioned image from the datasheet into a drawing's
model space. Check a few dimensions on the bitmap and scale it as
required so the numbers come out correctly. It's rare for a datasheet
drawing to have more than a few salient dimensions. The ad hoc
dimensioned elements won't be accurate to three decimal places but are
good enough for many purposes. (Sometimes it's possible to extract a
vector image from a PDF but that often seems to take more time than just
grabbing a bitmap.)
>> In Bricscad ... the 3D to 2D conversion is pretty easy.
>
>That is the kind of information I need (as testing all the software
>is beyond our capabilities - so it's always best to follow in your
>footsteps since you've already tested it a bit for us).
>
>Looks like Bricscad has a free 30-day trial period:
>
http://www.bricsys.com/en_INTL/bricscad/
>
>But after that, it seems to be very expensive (compared to freeware)
>at about $500 to $800 depending on the features. Certainly that's
>fantastically too high a price for what I need - but the 30-day
>trial 'might' be worth the learning curve (that is then thrown away)
>if I can't find freeware to do what I would like it to do.
The trial version does include the 3D tools for mesh surfaces and ACIS
solids and if it's a one-off, that may be all you need. If you're using
it professionally, though, it's worth the price. You're also buying the
time of a first-rate development and support staff.
That said, I generally recommend to, e.g, people in the office that just
need to look at and maybe "fill in the blanks" on a DWG file, that they
take a look at 3DS DraftSight, already mentioned up-thread.