algorithmic modeling for Rhino
A while ago someone (sorry but I don't know who) posted a layout here that showed how to make a parametrically controlled helix shape. I thought that would be a good basis for making threads so I added some additional components to do this. Here is my first print:
And here is a short video: https://youtu.be/N9wKgQTBH3A
I had to reprint the nut part 4 times to get the proper clearance value for the threads to work smoothly. So I set up a slider to control this. The attached GH file is set for a 6-sided nut and bolt because that is what's standard, but here in the US fire hydrants use 5-sided bolts so normal people can't mess with them. I think any odd-numbered of sides would produce an interesting and quizzical result.
The thread helix on this part is a 6-fold one; I did that to match the number of sides on the bolt and nut. But the script allows any number of layers for the helix; more would produce a finer and perhaps more interesting thread.
Since plastic nuts & bolts are not particularly useful I think my next print of this part will be a really big one. Perhaps with contrasting colors for the bolt and the nut.
Tags:
We had a discussion on threads/screw that ended on a 3d print question.
Wow - that thread has a lot of info - thanks. It looks to me like those guys were mostly interested in making or matching real nuts and bolts that worked in the real world - hence their focus on standard thread pitches etc. That is not the case for me - at least in my world of 3D printing most everything is a custom design and, since a 3D printer cannot even come close to the tolerances of a real thread cutting machine, it is not required to have all the complications shown in the scripts in that thread. But those scripts do show that even a simple nut or bolt is actually not all that simple.
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