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Jim Holsenback schrieb:
> The grey object on the right is a bed warmer .... fill it with hot water and
> it goes between the sheets (down by your toes), and yes perhaps a little
> more work is needed! It's a union of lathe object and a rounded box. Any
> ideas how to smooth the transition from base to lathe object?
Yes: Hard math :-P
I'll need a macro for linking rectangular blocks to cylinders, too, but
so far I haven't figured out the details yet. ATM I could only give you
an example of how to round off the edges on a linear polygon with
circular arcs, but although it's presumably a closely related problem,
it's not exactly the same.
> The table could probably use a little more normal work, but the edges ...
> well I have this table in the shop, pretty crude primitive construction. The
> methods of the period (c1840) never broke the edges like you're suggesting.
Even without deliberate rounding, beveling or even sanding, boards will
/never/ have perfectly sharp edges - not to mention some deal of
involutary beveling by wear.
(That's why on my steam locomotive I'm actually beveling - or more
precisely, rounding off - /everyhing/ at least a tiny bit, even if it is
supposed to be machined steel instead of cast iron.)
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