Sunday, June 26, 2016

Loading a Can Hauler

After a bit of struggling and letting my subconscious work on it overnight, here's an animation of a can being loaded into the hauler.

The models of the "hero" can and of the ships were created by Troutweaver.

I created the "depot" where the cans are stored while waiting for transshipment and a simplified can design to reduce graphics overhead.

The 640x480 video can be watched at
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vYwbla8zp08

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Loading a Can Hauler

Troutweaver was kind enough to send me a few more of his models.

Here's a Can Hauler being loaded. This is a "diorama". The models (cans, pusher and hauler) are being drawn by Celestia in fixed relationships with one another. I might be able to make it more active with the pusher actually shoving cans around, but that'll take some work.

 I think the pilot of the pusher is going to catch hell from the can hauler's cargomaster. The cans are being loaded in the wrong order: they should be loaded around the circumference starting close to the engines. That way the can hauler can leave with only a partial load and not be off balance.

(I didn't think of that problem until after I'd written the "catalog" for Celestia. Changing it would be enough work that I don't feel like doing that just yet.)


Monday, June 20, 2016

Mirrors reflecting sunlight into the torus.

NASA needed a little funding help....


Saturday, June 18, 2016

DSV Ringmaster

Here's another preliminary model, this time of the U.S. manned spacecraft sent to explore the Saturnian system in John Varley's book Titan. (See my previous posts.)


Thursday, June 16, 2016

Cables

Gaea has a multitude of cables supporting its structure, similar to a suspension bridge. Here's a preliminary layout as seen from inside the torus. It's incomplete and incorrect, of course.



Friday, June 10, 2016

A new project: Celestia Addon for Troutweaver's models

Something a little simpler, since I don't have to make the models myself. Troutweaver's models need only a few minor tweaks, like resizing so Anim8or likes working with them and reorienting so rotations work appropriately. Here's an initial attempt, showing two of his models, Norway and Pell Station, as drawn by Celestia.







Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Bent, poked and stretched

It took me a while to find the scale and offset needed to persuade Anim8or's "bend" Modifier to torque a straight tube the appropriate 60 degrees. I'd made a tube with its length the same as 1/6 of the circumference of the desired torus, but most offsets for the bend Modifier kept stretching its outside circumference instead of leaving it unchanged.

Then there's the matter of keeping the spoke from being squished during the bending. Pre-stretching left it all lumpy. :(  I had to cut it off and then reattach it afterward. I think it's a little skinnier than it should be, but I'm not up to resizing it for now.

Celestia has a bug in how it draws transparent surfaces when they're regions of an single mesh which have had a transparent material applied to them: their surfaces aren't correctly depth-sorted. The workaround is relatively straightforward, though: cut them out and paste them into the mesh but leave them as separate objects.





Saturday, June 4, 2016

Drawing Gaea



Infrequent posts are infrequent. :)

I've decided to try to model Gaea, a toroidal alien described by John Varley in his Gaean trilogy: Titan, Wizard and Demon. Some help with getting the sizes of its components correct was provided by someone who'd modeled it previously. In the Celestia screen-grabs below, individual components are separate meshes and have different colors. This is to help verify that the sizes are appropriate. In the final version, each 60 degree segment of the torus will be a single mesh, prodded into the appropriate shape. (Note that its mirrors are omitted for now.)

Using a rectilinear segment:












With the segment bent 60 degrees: