Planes is a 2013 American animated sports comedy film produced by Disneytoon Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures.[3] Directed and co-written by Klay Hall and produced by Traci Balthazor-Flynn, it is a spin-off of Pixar's Cars franchise. Despite not being produced by Pixar, the film was co-written and executive produced by Pixar and Walt Disney Animation Studios' then-chief creative officer John Lasseter, who directed the first two Cars films, while the remaining writers of the film included Jeffrey M. Howard. The film stars the voices of Dane Cook, Stacy Keach, Priyanka Chopra in her Hollywood debut, Brad Garrett, Teri Hatcher, Danny Mann, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Roger Craig Smith, John Cleese, Carlos Alazraqui, Sinbad, Val Kilmer, and Anthony Edwards. In the film, Dusty Crophopper (Cook), a crop duster plane in the town of Propwash Junction, wants to complete Wings Around the Globe with racing planes, especially Ripslinger (Smith), despite his fear of heights, with the help of naval aviator Skipper Riley (Keach), who trains him.
One main issue with simply averaging is Gimbal lock (try averaging two planes which x or y axis directly oppose each other, you will see the plane will just flip when it goes past halfway).
I don't believe Inventor has exact workflow you are looking for. But, may I ask you why you want to see the origin planes of the selected component? Do you want them to appear temporarily? Or, you want them to be visible until you turn them off. Are you trying to create a sketch on an origin plane?
I saw your post and decided to use your situation to increase my own skill set, so I wrote a custom plugin that will add the functionality you want. I attached a Windows installer file. If you download and run it, the next time you run Inventor, you'll find a new option in your right-click menu when you're in an assembly file. It'll be called "Show/Hide Planes", and it'll be located right below "Free Rotate". Select the components that you want to show or hide the planes of, then right click and select the new option. The planes will toggle on or off for each selected component.
Thank-you Sergio. I have wanted something like this for years. Your script has instantly increased my productivity and made setting up constraints to reference planes much, much less tedious!!! This should be a standard feature.
Section planes are driving me crazy. I want to delete all section planes in the model. Is there a window/menu where I can get a list of all the existing planes in them model, pretty much like the Scenes default tray menu?
Also, what do section planes depend on, Style or Saved Scene? Because every time I reload a Scene, the plane is back on, and even if I turn it off and re save the scene, it still happens again. I could not find anything relating to section planes in Styles.
Assuming it is, you need to set up a scene in SketchUp to show them and you need to make sure the style is set up correctly with Section planes displayed. Notice in my screen shot that the style shows as having been edited. The circular arrows on the thumbnail indicate that.
If its a scheduled route like LAS change planes in PHX then on to MKE then you would get 2 boarding passes and would board at the appropriate time with that flights boarding position as mentioned above
I need this kind of function for a very long time. Be able to import a set of µ-CT jpg/tiff images, do a 3D rendering, change CLUT, segmentation, etc., then, 3D animation with cutting planes and free rotations. If this can be provided for ImageJ/Fiji, it will be a god-sent.
Hoping to see this soon.
Thanks.
You can deploy OpenShift Container Platform clusters by using two different control plane configurations: standalone or hosted control planes. The standalone configuration uses dedicated virtual machines or physical machines to host the control plane. With hosted control planes for OpenShift Container Platform, you create control planes as pods on a hosting cluster without the need for dedicated virtual or physical machines for each control plane.
You can use hosted control planes for Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform to reduce management costs, optimize cluster deployment time, and separate management and workload concerns so that you can focus on your applications.
Because the control planes consist of pods that are launched on OpenShift Container Platform, control planes start quickly. The same principles apply to control planes and workloads, such as monitoring, logging, and auto-scaling.
An OpenShift Container Platform cluster where the HyperShift Operator is deployed and where the control planes for hosted clusters are hosted. The management cluster is synonymous with the hosting cluster.
Users who assume this role can request control planes and worker nodes, drive updates, or modify externalized configurations. Typically, this user does not manage or access cloud credentials or infrastructure encryption keys. The cluster service consumer persona can request hosted clusters and interact with node pools. Users who assume this role have RBAC to create, read, update, or delete hosted clusters and node pools within a logical boundary.
fwiw, if you have lots of parallel planes (can't see your sample, google can't resolve your domain), it's easy to keep them sorted along the perpendicular axis. For a list of planes [A B C D] the order-to-draw will be either [A B C D] or [D C B A] and nothing else! So there need not be a performance hit from sorting. Just keep them in order as you go.
Not only did planes make it easier for people to travel, but they made international cargo shipping more efficient too. The 1978 Airline Deregulation Act essentially introduced a free market to the airline industry, allowing airlines to set their own fares and routes for the first time. Newly deregulated, the industry dramatically changed, with routes altering, fares dropping, passengers increasing, and companies quickly forming. Deregulation also facilitated the growth of commercial shipping enterprises such as FedEx and UPS, which were now able to use much larger aircraft than they had been. Around the same time that the Airline Deregulation Act came into effect, reduced tariffs and further technological innovations helped increase global trade and travel. The culmination of these events led to more goods crisscrossing the globe every day, which is why the seemingly mundane shipping container became a building block of the globalized world today.
Commercial transport passenger planes are hit by lightning an average of one or two times a year. They are designed and built to have conducting paths through the plane to take the lightning strike and conduct the currents.
When it is suspected that a plane was hit by lightning, there is a mandatory inspection for damage, which can delay flights and be quite expensive. For that reason, as well as for turbulence, they avoid thunderstorms as much as possible. However, many planes are not required to be designed for protection from lightning. These include small private and experimental aircraft. There has not been a lightning-caused commercial transport airplane crash in many decades, but that's not true of the other groups of aircraft.
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