The Autodesk FBX Converter 2013.3 application will be found very quickly. Notice that after you select Autodesk FBX Converter 2013.3 in the list, the following information regarding the application is available to you: Safety rating (in the left lower corner). This explains the opinion other users have regarding Autodesk FBX Converter 2013.3. But it can be found here: Autodesk FBX converter This is first cut. On this, FBX Converter has been updated and currently at 2013.3.

Autodesk Fbx 2013.3 Converter

A few words on 3D engines and InterOp from WorldCAD Access:“For instance, InterOp now directly translates from competitor Parasolid, non-competitor SolidWorks (which uses Parasolid — it’s a complicated relationship), competitor Siemens NX, and non-competitor Catia V6; it reads and writes Dassault’s 3DXML with tesselation. It extracts graphical data from CAD programs like Solidworks, and then display it — although it is not clear to me what this last item means.OK, now I get it. “Graphical data” means that the imported 3D model looks just like in the originating CAD system, completed with shading, rectangular boxes at the ends of leaders, arrowheads, and so on.”Read more:New Dassault logo via WorldCAD Access. I am deeply interested in interoperability between form creation tools, as well as workflows that allow you to translate forms between these tools. Unfortunately, there is really no reliable way to bring forms from other tools into Revit and retain.

They have to be imported into Revit as geometry that Revit ‘likes’ (smooth ACIS solids), and then the geometry needs to be re-created as vanilla, or native, Revit geometry.However, the end result is a good one – because you are giving Revit What it Wants.This post will look at the following main topics:. Translating geometry from Mesh to Solid.

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Rebuilding or re-creating the Solid as native Revit geometry. Going from Revit into Rhino via gb XML.

Some plugins for GrasshopperMesh to SolidI am always on the lookout for ways to convert a mesh 3D form into a nice ACIS solid. From what I hear, Rhino / Grasshopper is the best way to do this.Here are a couple of other methods:This is essentially an AutoCAD plugin that can translate polyface mesh forms to proper solids.I installed Geomagic Studio 2012 64 bit. It comes as a fully functional 30 day trial.

This software does have various plugins to facilitate parametric data exchange – including one for Inventor. It can convert a mesh to polygons, and fill holes in a the object. It can also smooth faces.You can convert an object to Points, and then Wrap the points in a new Mesh, use some Mesh tools to tidy it up etc. You can save as a 3DS or Open Inventor fileFrom ACIS solid to genuine Revit FormOnce you have a nice, smooth closed ACIS solid form, it is time to import into Revit.Earlier this year, David Light provided an example on how to re-create a (relatively simple) form that was imported from Rhino. His method essentially involves:. Importing the geometry into a Conceptual Mass family. Divide surface of the imported geometry.

Create a template of intersections on the U and V grid. Trace the form using a few closed profiles. Remove the Import. Create the form using the traced profilesYou can read his full post here:Image from the other way – Revit into Rhino via gbXMLSometimes you may want to translate geometry from a Revit model and bring it into Rhino for analysis. The following quoted paragraph provides one method, and a plugin:I wanted to streamline the process of transferring Revit geometry into Rhino and simplifying it for DIVA analysis. GbXML seemed like a good way to do that.

So that being said, the plugin currently only uses a small portion of the gbXML schema to transfer basic geometry. I would be interested in feedback as I am sure there are bugsYou can download the plugin at the link below.

Installation instructions and an example are included.Image sourced via Hiroshi Jacobs atThings you can do in Grasshopper with C#Grasshopper features an impressive amount of highly interlinked components – from lines to trees, from circles to graph editors. Sometimes, however, when design tasks become more advanced, we might need to further customize this plugin by directly borrowing from Rhino commands. With these scripting components, the user can quickly solve otherwise more complex design behaviors.This list of C# scripts is a work in progress and is open for requests. Supporting v. 2 and some previous versions.Above paragraph via Giulio PiacentinoImage from to for download links to the scripts, and the complete list.ConclusionHopefully some of this information has been useful to you.Feel free to post other methods or workflows as a Comment. Iphone parolayla kilitlenmi olduu icin ona balanamad.

This site has a good explanation. It says that ASCII format is human readable, contains all the model's info, but it's not Blender-readable.

We need Binary format, and whoever makes the model needs to choose ASCII to give customers all the data, or they choose binary to make it importable to Blender. When they choose ASCII, we need to covert it ourselves. Supposedly there's a free tool for converting this using the Autodesk. I'm still looking around the Autodesk site for a free tool, but it may require some trial software.Update: I found this page with links to Autodesk tools, including the FBX 2013.3 Converter for Windows 64-bit mentioned earlier in this thread:Update 2: It.

worked! I converted my ASCII FBX to Binary, and I imported successfully into Blender 2.80. (.It = FBX 2013.3 Converter for Windows 64-bit).