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Quote from: Steam Haulage on November 22, 2017, 08:44:04 AMHi Chris,As you know already I have been inspired by your recent work on the very successful Lombard and now the Marion Shovel.Your 3D drawings in Fusion 360 give a great example of what can be achieved with realistic and detailed illustrations of the workings of these rather complex machines. I am still working with my thoughts on Ruston-Bucyrus Shovels which in many ways are similar to Marion's products. It seems that much of the original information on the R-B designs has been lost along with those of Ruston & Hornsby as a result of the takeovers by English Electric and then Siemens, neither of which were likely to have an interest in shovels. However I am still collecting whatever I can find, including various sources which have found their way to the Antipodes.I have been a user of Autodesk Inventor for some time and I want to compare the results from that very expensive programme with your work with the free ( for hobbyists) Fusion 360 which originates from the same software house. I wonder whether Inventor which has all sorts of bells and whistles but was 'invented' some years ago would perform as well as Fusion 360 which surely must have more up-to-date origins. Sorry to hijack your thread.JerryBeware: Fusion 360 is only free to hobbyists for a year. After that they charge like a wounded bull
Hi Chris,As you know already I have been inspired by your recent work on the very successful Lombard and now the Marion Shovel.Your 3D drawings in Fusion 360 give a great example of what can be achieved with realistic and detailed illustrations of the workings of these rather complex machines. I am still working with my thoughts on Ruston-Bucyrus Shovels which in many ways are similar to Marion's products. It seems that much of the original information on the R-B designs has been lost along with those of Ruston & Hornsby as a result of the takeovers by English Electric and then Siemens, neither of which were likely to have an interest in shovels. However I am still collecting whatever I can find, including various sources which have found their way to the Antipodes.I have been a user of Autodesk Inventor for some time and I want to compare the results from that very expensive programme with your work with the free ( for hobbyists) Fusion 360 which originates from the same software house. I wonder whether Inventor which has all sorts of bells and whistles but was 'invented' some years ago would perform as well as Fusion 360 which surely must have more up-to-date origins. Sorry to hijack your thread.Jerry
Well even if no real "chips" yes, there is at least some brass sawdust . Nice start on the bucket Chris!!Bill
Now the initial work looks great, but, I have to admit that with all the talk of snow ( and the season) all I could think about was mint chocolate chip cookies and vanilla bean hot cocoa Y’all stay warm Cletus
And the build as began
Don’t tell me you sprinkle them with raw sugar crystals, you know, the ones that have a bit of a yellowish tint Cletus
On the model subject: this one looks to be of larger size than the Lombard. On the cookie subject: Grandma Douglas always dusted her Christmas shortbread cookies with raw cane sugar. Under candle light on her dessert table, they had the most wonderful warm glow .Cletus