Pedal Steel model for SketchUp
Moderator: Wiz Feinberg
- Jerry Gleason
- Posts: 1098
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Eugene, Oregon, USA
Pedal Steel model for SketchUp
Anybody using Sketchup? It's Google's 3D modeling software, available free from Google's website. I made this model of a pedal steel as a way to teach myself the program. If you were viewing the model in SketchUp, you would be able to rotate it 360 degrees, zoom in, pan, etc. It's very easy and intuitive. I mean, I just got this program yesterday, and I was able to do this:
Here's the model from another angle:
It took me a few hours to create it, because I had to make every single part; tuners, pickups, keyheads, etc., but because so many parts are duplicated, it's not all that bad. It's not supposed to be any particular brand of guitar, it has Carter fretboards because it was easier to photograph my guitar fretboard and paste it in than to try to model it in Sketchup.
This model can be used in a number of ways, such as this architechtural rendering below:
Pretty cool for free software! If anyone is using this program, and wants to use my D-10 model, let me know, and I'll email it to you.
Here's the model from another angle:
It took me a few hours to create it, because I had to make every single part; tuners, pickups, keyheads, etc., but because so many parts are duplicated, it's not all that bad. It's not supposed to be any particular brand of guitar, it has Carter fretboards because it was easier to photograph my guitar fretboard and paste it in than to try to model it in Sketchup.
This model can be used in a number of ways, such as this architechtural rendering below:
Pretty cool for free software! If anyone is using this program, and wants to use my D-10 model, let me know, and I'll email it to you.
Last edited by Jerry Gleason on 19 Apr 2007 11:33 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- Jack Stoner
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- Jerry Gleason
- Posts: 1098
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Eugene, Oregon, USA
Thanks for the kind words. It's not really as difficult as you might think. I'm not a stranger to computer graphics, but I've never spent time with a 3D CAD / CAM program. The basic concepts are pretty easy to understand. Something like a Pedal steel is fairly straightforward to model, since it's mostly rectangular and round shapes.
Making something like a basic Grover tuning gear, for example, is just three intersecting cylindrical shapes, plus an extruded half-circle. Duplicate as many times as needed, flip for opposite side. You only have to make each part once.
I got fired up about this program after seeing some studio designs made with it on one of the recording forums I visit. Even the free version offers so many interesting possibilites for wasting time... er, uh, making interesting stuff.
Being the perfectionist that I am, I have already tweaked that D-10 model a number of times since I posted those photos. Every time I look at it, I see something that's not right, like the pedal spacing, keyhead, or something else, so I have to go back and fix it. If a person had the time and inclination, you could make all the undercarriage parts too, but I'm not quite that obsessive.
Making something like a basic Grover tuning gear, for example, is just three intersecting cylindrical shapes, plus an extruded half-circle. Duplicate as many times as needed, flip for opposite side. You only have to make each part once.
I got fired up about this program after seeing some studio designs made with it on one of the recording forums I visit. Even the free version offers so many interesting possibilites for wasting time... er, uh, making interesting stuff.
Being the perfectionist that I am, I have already tweaked that D-10 model a number of times since I posted those photos. Every time I look at it, I see something that's not right, like the pedal spacing, keyhead, or something else, so I have to go back and fix it. If a person had the time and inclination, you could make all the undercarriage parts too, but I'm not quite that obsessive.
- Bill Ferguson
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- Location: Milton, FL USA
- Contact:
Yes
Jerry, I would very much appreciate your emailing me your drawing.
I did a steel for my business card in MSWord that turned out very good, but is not 3D.
Thanks in advance,
Bill Ferguson
bferguson9@aol.com
I did a steel for my business card in MSWord that turned out very good, but is not 3D.
Thanks in advance,
Bill Ferguson
bferguson9@aol.com
- Allen Howington
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Copy
Bill, I would appreciate a copy as well, thanks in advance. Allen Howington (forum member)
- Papa Joe Pollick
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- Bill Ferguson
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Joe, that only saves the picture. We want the original so we can play with it in Sketch Up.
I have it now, thanks to Jerry.
Allen, I will email you my MSWord steel
Bill
I have it now, thanks to Jerry.
Allen, I will email you my MSWord steel
Bill
AUTHORIZED George L's, Goodrich, Telonics and Peavey Dealer: I have 2 steels and several amps. My current rig of choice is 1993 Emmons LeGrande w/ 108 pups (Jack Strayhorn built for me), Goodrich OMNI Volume Pedal, George L's cables, Goodrich Baby Bloomer and Peavey Nashville 112. Can't get much sweeter.