| | Re: Cone primitives Karim Nassar
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| | (...) What does the numeral at the end of the name signify? (1-4con'3') If I make a cone that matches the slop I need for the canopy, how would I determine what to call it? --Karim (26 years ago, 12-May-99, to lugnet.cad.dev)
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| | | | Re: Cone primitives John VanZwieten
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| | | | (...) without (...) too, (...) The 3 refers to the inner radius of the cone. All cone primitives (like ring primitives) are made with an outer radius which is 1 LDU greater than the inner radius. So a con3.dat would have inner-radius 3 and outer (...) (26 years ago, 12-May-99, to lugnet.cad.dev)
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| | | | | | Re: Cone primitives Karim Nassar
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| | | | (...) the (...) Ok, I'm just about done with this part... but the hangup is the final section of conical canopy at the nose. This cone goes from a radius of 20 to a radius of 1.943 in a Y-scale of 12.243. I've tried Steve's spreadsheet, and it (...) (26 years ago, 14-May-99, to lugnet.cad.dev)
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| | | | | | Re: Cone primitives John VanZwieten
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| | | | Karim <knassar@mindspring.com> wrote in message news:FBp65M.C8D@lugnet.com... (...) radius (...) to (...) advice: (...) it (...) huh? (...) Using your 1-4con1.dat, here's the cone you requested: 1 16 0 1.317 0 1.943 0 0 0 1.317 0 0 0 1.943 (...) (26 years ago, 14-May-99, to lugnet.cad.dev)
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