MajorPayne
Member
- Messages
- 116
guys and girls,
I've used this quite a few times and it's handy for making exhaust type systems, I mainly use it to get my angles correct when making cones though, but honestly you can make all sorts of sizes and then print them out, cut around and bend the metal
*It just makes things a little easier for you from time to time.
Here's the blurb about the product from the people who make it.
pulserate.com
Hope someone else has as much fun with it as I do
Kind regards,
MajorPayne
P.S: Best of all it's free, to a point! Now all I have to do is buy some slip-rolls so I dont have to use an anvil in my friends garage...
I've used this quite a few times and it's handy for making exhaust type systems, I mainly use it to get my angles correct when making cones though, but honestly you can make all sorts of sizes and then print them out, cut around and bend the metal
*It just makes things a little easier for you from time to time.
Here's the blurb about the product from the people who make it.
Cone Layout is a program to unfold a frustum of a cone and generate a sheet cutting layout or flat pattern projection that can be rolled or bend up into a truncated cone shape. Either side of the truncated cone can be tilted. To help you visualise the cone you are editing, a rotating 3D model shows the dimensions.
The layout pattern can be printed directly on paper for use as a template for cutting out the shape from a plate of metal. Or you can write the layout pattern to an AutoCAD® DXF file which is the world standard among computer controlled cutters. Other supported file formats are Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) or a plain text file with coordinates.
The program has a minimization routine, which will minimize the amount of wasted material by varying the seam along which the cone is cut open. The program automatically selects the smallest rectangular piece of material big enough to hold the pattern.
pulserate.com
Hope someone else has as much fun with it as I do
Kind regards,
MajorPayne
P.S: Best of all it's free, to a point! Now all I have to do is buy some slip-rolls so I dont have to use an anvil in my friends garage...