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Mechanical watch timing software
Mechanical watch timing software












  1. Mechanical watch timing software install#
  2. Mechanical watch timing software software#
  3. Mechanical watch timing software trial#
  4. Mechanical watch timing software simulator#

I looks pretty neat, with a bunch of interesting features:Ĭlassic Chat: Arko Takes Us Inside NASA’s Legendary JPL 3 Comments Will all that said, I just came across Pyslvs-UI,, which apparently can use the solvespace constraint kernel as one of its solvers.

Mechanical watch timing software software#

So maybe I’ll give it a spin eventually in a virtual machine someday.Īs a sidenote, I find it a superb anecdote that the author of such software has an artistic background. Sadly, being a linux user, I couldn’t even get the linkageXP.msi version to run under wine. Just discovered David Rector’s software, and it looks very impressive, and more that adequate for my needs.

mechanical watch timing software

Mechanical watch timing software trial#

With psmotion’s mechdesigner, I’ve tried to register at their website a bunch of times over the years but never got a reply or trial link.īeen getting into Solvespace over the past few days to simulate linkages.

mechanical watch timing software

As does “Linux only” or “Mac only”.Īs a student/tinkerer, been looking for FOSS (or otherwise easily accessible) software to get into linkage design for a long time. I was surprised to find that there were very few changes I had to make – most of what I already used was available for all the “big three” platforms.

Mechanical watch timing software install#

But the development of multi-platform development tools (Java, Qt, Python-based) have undermined most of the excuses for limiting development to one platform.Ībout two years ago, I broke my Ubuntu installation on a MacBook badly, and remembering how painful it had been to install in the first place, I decided to see how much of the stuff I’m used to doing in Linux could be done in OS X. Fortunately it’s getting better – just a few years ago, almost everything was developed for a specific machine architecture and operating system, and many of us had to have multiple machines to do our work. People choose their primary operating system for many, many reasons, and having to either reboot or (horrors) switch to a whole different machine for a particular task is annoying at the very least. In fact, for most people, Linux-only is pretty much an automatic disqualifier when considering software. Posted in classic hacks, Software Hacks, Toy Hacks Tagged animation, animatronic, art, four bar linkage, linkage, mechanical engineering, sculpture, simulation Post navigation

Mechanical watch timing software simulator#

If you’d like to study up on your nuts and bolts, check out our primer on the ubiquitous four-bar linkage, or pore through Hackaday looking for other great linkage-powered examples, like this automatic hacksaw or a pantograph PCB probe for shaky hands.Īnyone know of an open-source linkage simulator that can also output STL files for 3D printing? Or in any format that could be easily transformed into OpenSCAD? Asking for a “friend”. But we really don’t want you to miss out if you’re doing mechanical design and need something like this, or just want to play around. We’ve actually secretly featured ’s Linkage software before, in this writeup of some amazing cosplay animatronic wings that used the program for their design. Of special note is that ’s software allows for sliding linkages, which he makes very good use of in the rolling ball sculpture shown here. It’s a Windows-only application (sigh), but it’s free to use, while the video guides (more YouTube) look very comprehensive and give you a quick tour of the tool. Instead, he wrote a simulator that lets him try out various custom linkages in real time. See how the arms hesitate just a bit as the ball is transferred? See how the upper arm gently places it on the ramp with a slight downward gesture? See how it’s done with one motor? There’s no way designed this on paper, right? Check out the design and flow of his rolling ball sculpture (YouTube, embedded below) to see what we mean. Most of us are more bits-and-bytes than nuts-and-bolts, but we have the deepest appreciation for the combination of the two.














Mechanical watch timing software