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T-Splines Introduces Next-Generation Surfacing to Rhino

By DE Editors


 
May 2, 2007
Dear Desktop Engineering Reader:

T-Splines is cool stuff. T-Splines combines NURBS and subds — sub-divisional surfaces — letting you futz with models as a single surface instead of a collection of patches. What it boils down to is that it gives you the type of free-form modeling tools you’d find in an animation package. Even with complex geometries, the company tells me that you can model surfaces that are free of gaps and with curvatures continuous all the way through.

DE will soon be reviewing T-Splines for Rhino 4.0 plug-in. If you’re into fiddling with NURBS and subds, you can start doing your own review right now by downloading the beta release from the company website. The links are in today’s write-up.

We can make this an interactive review. Drop me a line with your impressions as you do your review. I’ll share them with our reviewer.

Thanks, Pal. – Lockwood.

Anthony J. Lockwood
Editorial Director
Desktop Engineering

T-Splines Introduces Next-Generation Surfacing to Rhino

T-Splines for Rhinoceros 4.0 gives designers optimal surface modeling control and full industry standard compatibility.

T-Splines, Inc. (Provo, UT) has announced the beta release of T-Splines for Rhino 4.0. T-Splines for Rhino 4 combines NURBS and subd (sub-divisional surfaces) methods, and augments them with tools of its own, enabling modelers to work with models as a single surface instead of as patches. The beta product is available as a free download for a limited time at the company website.

T-Splines for Rhino brings the free-form modeling capabilities traditionally found in animation modeling packages to Rhino. T-Spline models are easy to edit, having an average of 50 percent fewer control points than the identical NURBS model. Featured T-Splines workflows new to Rhino include subdivision surface box modeling, creating a single surface from a complex network of curves, and merging non-touching surfaces together into a single surface. The plugin also comes with a built-in translator to convert polygonal mesh files into T-Splines and NURBS.

   
MicroScribe X

Designers using the T-Splines product can expect the following benefits:
• Modeling control. T-Splines introduces unsurpassed control to surface modeling, allowing designers to more quickly create complex surfaces and manipulate them with ease, yielding reductions in modeling workflow times of 20 to 30 percent.
• Compatibility. 100 percent loss-less conversion of T-Splines surfaces to NURBS, as well as conversion of polygonal meshes to T-Splines, ensures full industry compatibility and seamless integration in your design process.
• Value. T-Splines combine modeling methods in one application that were previously only available separately.
• Surface quality. T-Splines surfaces of any level of complexity are gap free and curvature continuous throughout, making them ideal for downstream detail design, analysis, and manufacturing. They are watertight by default and very easy to smooth, making them ideal for offsetting and manufacturing.

With its focus on keeping the surface as simple as possible, T-Splines accommodates both simple and complex modeling projects, and excels at organic shapes. T-Splines is used in various applications by industrial designers, CAD professionals, and animators to create models from scratch or converted from polygons, subdivision surfaces, or NURBS. Using T-Splines, the entire model can be merged together to eliminate tangency concerns, and additional detail can be added locally without changing the surface.

The beta version of T-Splines for Rhino can be downloaded here. Workflow videos and case studies are available here. For more information, visit tsplines.com.

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DE Editors

DE’s editors contribute news and new product announcements to Digital Engineering.
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