I’m using Fusion360, and I dislike it for a lot of reasons, but it’s easy to use. I tried FreeCAD, but it was very janky in comparison. Shapr3D was surprisingly good, but there’s no way I’m paying monthly for my hobby usage. I need precision prints, so I can’t just use Blender or similar.

Is there some magical unicorn software I’m not finding?

  • altphoto@lemmy.today
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    2 hours ago

    FreeCAD. Anything that’s not opensource is basically using you for some nefarious purpose. You’re a product or a product in the making or you’re making a product for them…you could be training a CAD AI to end all CAD.

    FreeCAD is us. You use it, if you find a problem you report it or fix it. That simple. Your CAD files don’t die because the company changed CEO or died.

  • Adulated_Aspersion@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    What sort of precision are you not getting from blender?

    Once you set the parameters (I set mine to mm), I have found it to be accurate enough to make additional tools with which to measure.

    Mind you, I don’t need accuracy down past a mm.

  • klangcola@reddthat.com
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    11 hours ago

    FreeCAD, and I recommend you give it a second try, while watching the excellent tutorials from Deltahedra and Mangojelly on YouTube. Lots of the jank can be avoided if you only know how, so the tutorials are extremely useful.

    FreeCAD has gotten exponentially better with each release the last few years, and both active developers and funding/donations from users have increased exponentially. The future is bright. And unlike the “free” commercial programs, FreeCAD is immune to future rug-pulls and enshitification.

    You might also want to try https://dune3d.org/ , a relatively new 3D CAD software

  • bold_omi@lemmy.today
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    14 hours ago

    FreeCAD for most things. Microcad for anything I need to script. I hear OpenSCAD is promising.

    • idunnololz@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      FreeCAD has possibly the worst UI I have ever used combined with some of the worst UX of any software. But it has every feature I need, it’s free and it works (mostly).

    • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      22 hours ago

      100% this. Ive been through 4 different cad packages professionally and every single one of them is terrible bad awful garbage. Pick your flavor of garbage and get with it.

      After a few months of forcing myself to learn it, FreeCAD really isn’t that bad. It’s miles better than Creo.

    • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      I was learning with freecad.

      Tried to defeature the screw holes on Steam Controller model and it crashed the application :/

      I’m still learning so I have no idea how to do that manually :<

  • MushuChupacabra@piefed.world
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    21 hours ago

    I use FreeCAD.

    I follow Mango Jelly Solutions and DeltaHedra on YouTube for tutorials.

    I’ve had excellent results designing items for 3D prints.

    • neclimdul@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      Mango’s videos are great. I’d wager there are gems in there for even experienced users of freecad. I’m often surprised by some of the tricks he has.

  • PonyOfWar@pawb.social
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    23 hours ago

    FreeCAD. It’s janky, absolutely, but it’s quite powerful once you get used to it. Improved a lot with the latest major update as well.

    I also tried OpenSCAD for a bit. As someone with a programming background, I really like the principle of how it works. But ultimately, I found it way too limiting.

    • meowmeow@quokk.auOP
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      22 hours ago

      I used OpenSCAD for a bit, and it’s good for simple things where clicking is far less efficient. I once needed a plate with a set of holes. OpenSCAD was great.

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    OpenSCAD. Nothing for the faint of heart, you need to know what you are doing, but it is perfect for programmers like me.

    • TootSweet@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately.

      Over time, I’ve come to hate doing things in the “productivity-via-point-and-click-adventure” model. I very much think the use cases where the mouse is actually necessary are way slimmer than people really think.

      If FreeCAD and similar tools take the approach of the “potter” paradigm where you connect your brain to the medium via your fingers as directly as possible even if the medium is digital/virtual (like most of the CAD programs out there), OpenSCAD is more of a “dark factory” paradigm where you externalize a piece of your mind/expertise into a program that encodes all of your expertise and the program acts on the medium on your behalf. (And in the case of OpenSCAD, the program is kindof “made of the same thing as the medium itself.”)

      In the “potter” paradigm:

      • You end up with a finished product, but devoid of any accounting of the decisions which went into making the finished product.
      • Your metaphysical “finger prints” make it into the end product. The tiniest twitch of a finger is reflected in the final product, even if it’s an unconscious motion.
      • Altering earlier steps that came earlier in the process isn’t as easy. Think of a painter layering paints to capture the subtle tones of human skin and then deciding that four layers down they wish they’d done something different. To fix it, they’d have to cover part of the image and redo all the steps manually. (And yes, undo chains attempt mitigate this somewhat, but imperfectly since reapplying later steps isn’t necessarily perfect.)
      • Excessive precision isn’t typically possible.
      • Making another, similar asset is a manual process that can’t reuse the steps/expertise that went into building previous ones cleanly.
      • There’s no time spent after finishing your work where the computer has to work/chug to produce the finished product.
      • Parameterized builds are less natural.
      • For digital assets, almost always involves using a pointing device.

      In the “dark factory” paradigm:

      • You end up not just with a finished product, but also a program that gives much more insight into how the product was built and what decisions were made in the process of constructing it.
      • Only conscious decisions go into the final product.
      • Altering earlier steps can be done much more cleanly and later steps can be written in such a way that they “automatically” inherit properties introduced by changes in earlier steps.
      • Perfection(ism?) by default. The perfect may be at risk of becoming the enemy of the good.
      • Later, similar assets can reuse the logic from earlier assets where there are similarities.
      • You might spend some time waiting for your program to finish running before your asset is ready.
      • Parameterization is like breathing. It’s arguably easier than not parameterizing.
      • Requires no mouse or pointing device. Just a text editor.

      And mind you, a lot of programs try to kindof live somewhere in the middle. Being extremely mouse-driven while still supporting parameterization. Or doing sophisticated things with

      I’m not trying to advocate against the “potter” paradigm. There are benefits and drawbacks to both. And I can’t bash just doing what works for you. But a) the “potter” paradigm doesn’t work for me very well at all and the “dark factory” paradigm does and b) I very much believe that the “dark factory” paradigm is so underserved as to be nearly non-existent. I know of OpenSCAD (and ImplicitCAD and a few others in the CAD space) and Graphviz and a few others that were suggested to me in this comment tree. And CodeComic which I personally wrote. And I’m working on another such DSL for making 3D models/assets for games and 3D animations. (Think “art” rather than “engineering”. FreeCAD is to OpenSCAD as Blender is to what I’m building. Yes I’m planning to Open Source it in the near-ish future.) But there’s so little in that realm.

      So, as you can imagine I really love OpenSCAD. I’d be very surprised to find myself using anything else for CAD in the future that wasn’t a DSL.

      P.S. Maybe I should start a blog. Heh.

    • thejml@sh.itjust.works
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      22 hours ago

      I love OpenSCAD because not only can I easily parameterize things, and define libraries for commonly used stuff but I can also combine it with my Git setup to get all the benefits of code provenance and backups and change sets and such.

    • SmoochyPit@lemmy.ca
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      22 hours ago

      +1 for OpenSCAD! If you have experience with scripting/coding, it feels really comfy. There’s a nice wikibook that taught me the basics.

      The full release hasn’t been updated since 2021, so I highly recommend running a development snapshot. The preview and rendering are much more performant. Enable the “manifold” engine if it’s not on by default.


      It works fine OOTB, but I customized it a bit to match my workflow: I use vim with an LSP as the text editor, and I use git to track my changes.

      Now I’ve began using bosl2 in most of my projects. It has a lot of QOL features and can save a lot of work.

  • LastYearsIrritant@sopuli.xyz
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    22 hours ago

    OnShape is what I use. Fusion is fine, but a little heavy for me.

    FreeCAD is just slightly too clunky for what I use it for, but I’ll keep trying every release to see if I change my mind.

    In the meantime, OnShape is cross platform cause it’s all in browser and I don’t care about my designs being public. I actually post them all free anyway.

    • wjrii@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      In the meantime, OnShape is cross platform cause it’s all in browser and I don’t care about my designs being public. I actually post them all free anyway.

      The biggest issue with their license is that they went so hard on protecting themselves hosting it, that they basically give everyone BUT the creatort the right to monetize a public design. It’s an offensively sloppy ToU, or at least it was the last time I checked it.

  • cAUzapNEAGLb@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    Do make sure to retry freecad if you havent in a while - they finally merged their big update that made faces not break - its still got a learning curve but its far less frustrating now

  • wjrii@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    Some of it will depend on what your goals and OS are. OnShape is pretty good, and being in-browser it’s inherently cross-platform. BUT… their free tier has the single worst licensing setup imaginable: your designs are public, you can’t make a single cent off them, BUT any paying customer (and arguably any other user at all) can. They also jump straight from free to enterprise pricing.

    Fusion you know. Licensewise, the free version gives you a small grace zone to make a couple of bucks without issues, and you can at elast keep your designs to yourself.

    SolidWorks has an extremely heavy and unfriendly web interface, but their in-browser parametric 3D CAD is better than it used to be, and you can get a maker plan for $25-$50 a year that gives you a little wiggle room to sell a few trinkets and not get blasted if someone or something rats you out to Dassault. If you’re on Windows, you’ll also be able to install proper SolidWorks (though files will be watermarked to limit them to a hobbyist/maker install.

    Solid Edge is a bit clunkier than (real) SolidWorks or Fusion, is windows only, and there’s also a doughnut hole for limited commercial use, but it’s the full software and it’s free as in beer.

    Since they cleared up the worst of the toponaming issue, FreeCAD is way better than it used to be. I still feel like the moment you have to do anything more than draw/extrude/fillet, then all the clunkiness comes back, though. It’s a brilliant project in its way, but it remains a mixed bag, shall we say.

    I paid for a permanent license for my version of Alibre Design, and that’s what I generally use. It’s somewhere between SolidEdge and Solidworks in user-friendliness, and more than powerful enough for my keyboards and random widgets. I also do like the simplicity of owning my license and therefore fully controlling my designs, but it wasn’t cheap, probably two years’ worth of monthly payments on the Shapr3D usable tier or the fancy Fusion tier, so I will probably keep plugging along for a while yet. They have a more basic product (Atom) that’s missing some fairly useful features, but is still parametric and is rather cheap. It’s also all Windows only, though I keep hearing the next version will play nice with Wine/Proton. For now, my investment with Alibre is pretty much THE reason I occasionally boot back into Windows.

    TinkerCAD (opwned by Autodesk like Fusion is) is great for certain things, and the “make shape, set solid or hole” workflow is much more intuitive for the abject beginner, but if you’re on Fusion you’re already past the need for it, i’d think.

    There are other players (Rhino, Plasticity, DesignSpark, SolveSpace, among others), but Fusion, Shapr3D (for single parts only, no assemblies),OnShape, SolidEdge, FreeCAD, Alibre, and Solidworks pretty much cover mechanical CAD that’s (1) full-featured, (2) 3D, (3) got parametric history and (4) available with usable free or maker versions.