Grasshopper

algorithmic modeling for Rhino

Hi all,

I'm new here, so I have a question, is there anyway to make hexagonal pattern on surface with the exact same dimension for one hexagon, lets say I want the edges to have the same dimension in all the surface, I tried lunch box and different methods, but i get hexagons which get smaller or thinner relating to curvature,

I want something like this,

Thanks guys!

Views: 7338

Attachments:

Replies to This Discussion

I think this has come up before on this forum but I'm not sure there's an easy solution. Even in the photo you posted, the hexagons don't all look the same and some of those hexagons are definitely pentagons!

I've spent quite a lot of time experimenting with geodesic domes and they are not made up of equally sized triangles, even though they can look the same, there are slight differences.

Wikipedia Geodesic

They all start with an icosohedron which is a 20 face shape, each face being an equilateral triangle. To smooth the dome shape and get it closer to a sphere, the triangular faces are split into more triangles and the points on these triangles are projected out onto the sphere. Projecting the points out changes the lengths of the sides of the triangles slightly so they are no longer equilateral but you start to see hexagons and pentagons appear (White lines) ...

I think if you deviate from the curvature of a sphere then you can't fit identical hexagons and pentagons to the surface anymore but MAYBE there is a way of approximating the surface as close as possible by only using hexagons? Or, to allow some deviation from hexagons and pentagons but minimising this?

As I said, I'm sure there have been some posts about this on here in the past, but I can't remember if anyone has had success!

There is no way to approximate sphere using only hexagons, you always have to use some pentagons. I think that's not a problem for Sahar Mi as in the picture "Capture.PNG" you can see some pentagons.

If you want to get hexagons out of this geodesic dome use weaverbird's mesh dual.

Hi Mateuzz, do you mean the weaverbird dual graph?

Hi Martyn, well having a couple of pentagons is fine, thanks I am looking them up

Is this good enough?

Thanks for you response and the image,I guess you did projection, no actually since the ones close to the edge are more long, its not my answer.

Hey, maybe I can help you with this parameterization, I made this a while ago, is a disaster, I was a newbie so it have a lots of mistakes but you can use as reference.

Your you can download it here: http://bit.ly/1exQ99V

You have to open the file of Rhino first and then the file of grasshopper because that there are points of reference in the archive of Rhino.

Hi  Ildefonso ,thanks for you response, Is this your dropbox? cause I can not have access to that, will you please email it to me or maybe give me a link somewhere else?

my email is sahaar_mi@yahoo.com 

Attachments:

Here I send it again.

Attachments:

thank youuuuuuuuu very much!

Thank you all for responding, I am trying to do all the methods you said one by one, wish me luck, and i ll post the picture here soon!

RSS

About

Translate

Search

Videos

  • Add Videos
  • View All

© 2024   Created by Scott Davidson.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service