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Inventor 2019: The Sharpest Tool for Woodworking

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Description

This class will present both techniques and actual working methods and workflows used by end-user companies utilizing Inventor software with customized toolsets. The creation of architectural content, furniture, cabinetry, millwork, doors, windows, trade show booths, stairs, store fixtures, and interiors for boats, planes, and tour buses are just a few of the industries utilizing the software today. This class will emphasize actual construction procedures using the latest version of Inventor software and several core development tools. The presentation of multiple approaches to shortening cycle time to manufacturing is the key in increasing accuracy as well as time to manufacturing. One-button CNC can be a reality. If 25% or more of your design is utilizing wood products, this class will assist you by presenting automated alternatives. The end goal is that designers have more time for creativity, enabling them to work more efficiently and accurately.

Principaux enseignements

  • Learn how to identify and adopt the necessary workflows for designing and fabricating wood-based design
  • Learn how Inventor can be customized and become the primary tool for all possible wood design development
  • Learn how to apply efficient practices for standardization of engineering and manufacturing departments
  • Learn how to build for manufacturing/CNC output

Intervenant

  • Steven Widom
    Steve is the senior solutions engineer and CTO for Widom Associates, an Autodesk® Consulting Value Added Reseller based in Northport, New York. He has used Autodesk software since 1984 in the fabrication, manufacturing and architectural fields as a trainer, consultant and application expert. He provides custom classes and support for Autodesk Suites, Inventor® AutoCAD® 3D andAutoCAD® Revit specific to the metal, plastic, wood and architectural industries.With a specific interest in the woodworking fabrication field - Architectural , millwork , furniture fabrication , case goods , stair development , dorr and window developmentwww.youtube.com/widomtechHe has over 30 years of teaching/consulting experience. In his life before computers, Steve designed and manufactured juried, award-winning custom-hardwood furnitureas well as designing and building custom homes.
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Transcript

PRESENTER: You can see how long it is. It's about eight feet long. But you can create a snake puzzle. The dowel that you see going through there is what holds it all together. You pull the dowel out the eyes. I haven't taken a picture since, but I've shortened the dowel, cut it up, painted it black. And when you pull it apart, it looks like that.

I just love doing stuff to see if I can do it. My daughter is avidly into pugs, right? So I made her a pug puzzle. But I did some things with the pug puzzle to make it more fun. I cut pieces like that on a scroll saw. End pieces like that. And everybody in here know how you cut puppies, how you make puppies with a scroll saw? Like that.

[LAUGHING]

She gets the puzzle. It's all pieces, right? And then she gets to this one here, and she goes, "Oh, Dad, you cut the back." I'm like, "I'm sorry, sweetheart, I know. I just messed up and I had to go with it." And then she's like, oh, OK. And then about 30 seconds later I get, "Oh, Dad."

[LAUGHING]

But you can have fun with things, right? She's the only girl in the world that has a puzzle with this in it. And there's more. So we like to have fun. I'm just going to go through some things, just to give you an idea of the scope of work I do. I have a 20-inch band saw. It's one of the biggest investments I ever made. But it allows me to mill wood.

Does anybody in here cut their own wood, or mill their own wood? No? Yes, two? OK. You sticker it, and let it dry, I'm assuming? OK. Stickers are just pieces of wood. You stack your boards up and put weight, like concrete blocks, on it, so it stays flat. Because otherwise it'll warp. You whet the ends down with a sealer-- I can't remember, there's a waxy sealer you put on the ends so they don't crack, they don't-- there's a name for that. Check. The ends don't check. And then you let them dry, like you see in here.

A use case for this, by the way-- we're going to talk about organic, what's good for Inventor, and what's good for AutoCAD, too. How many AutoCAD users in the room? Oh, cool. Old school. All right. I started in AutoCAD in '94. Release 11. A lot of things that are very straightforward that are organic and inorganic in shape. So very square, straight, easy to look at, easy to figure out. It's easier to do an AutoCAD. You don't have to spend the time modeling in Inventor if you don't want to.

So I just created a corner cabinet for between two couches. And it just has a couple of tilt-up lids on it. Very straightforward, four posts on the side and slots in between. Did it in AutoCAD. I could figure out where I had to route my slots of full mortars on either side, and really easy to do. Something like this-- you can draw a circle in AutoCAD, right here on the end of your log. So just get the diameter of your log. And then you can play with what size boards you want to cut out of it, if you want. So it's very simple things to figure out to maximize your material use, if you know what thickness you're going to need for the project, or if you know what width you're going to need. The thickness or the width can drive how you slice those things up. We have some really cool tools at hand.

Why use Inventor for projects? The number one reason I use Inventor on projects is because it allows me to make mistakes and not have to pay for it in board feet. Right? I can pay for it in pixels. I guess I don't have a very good internet connection in here. Darn. Oh, well. I don't know how well you can see this. I want to just try and open this, and see if it opens. It's not going to open, is it? Shoot. That's too bad.

Well, I don't have a good enough internet connection. I didn't have enough time. By the way, I was on the floor yesterday. Did you all get the thing that said "class canceled"? All right. I get it. I was on the show floor down like, "No! I wanted to go to this thing!" So I said, maybe we could all get together and talk, all right? So I asked them and they said, yeah, come on up real quick. So this is how we got here. That's how much time I had to prepare for all this. And now-- oh, I'm not connected. How did I lose a connection? Hopefully this does it. Connect. I just walked down the hall. I didn't even shut my computer off. So let's try it again. There we go.

So here's a corner cabinet. This is one that really, really lends itself well-- and I'll show you this in Inventor. I pulled it up in Inventor. So this is on there. Mom, what you can't see is when you go down the hall, this is the end of the hall. This is the wall at the end of the hall. There's a door here into my daughter's room, and this is the door to our bedroom. So there's plenty of room in there for something. But if I build a full cabinet it gets in the way. Right? So my wife's like, can we do a triangular cabinet? I said, sure. So this was going to have a door in front of the hamper, and I got this far, and she's like, "No, no, don't touch it. Just like this. Leave it." I've got two doors downstairs and I'm not doing anything with them. But there's going to be a tilt-out door and all that on there.

This is really nice because it allows me to do some finer detail work here, with the beveled edge on the bottom, and these odd corners, and back here. And how am I going to deal with the plywood that goes in between? Because I wanted to keep it lightweight. So on the back, it's plywood. And I cut sea turtles and everything, because my wife loves them and it's kind of like an in-house brand. And you see how we filled it up with some nautical things in there, and put some-- what do you call it-- hung some netting in there. So it's kind of got this oceany type feel to it.

But in Inventor-- this is how it actually looks in Inventor. It's awfully dark in here. It's just on the screen. You can't see much detail, but in Inventor, I can grab the door and open it. So you can do things like that. And this is called an assembly in Inventor. So in Inventor, the way Inventor works-- and we'll get to this at the end of the class-- is you open up Inventor and you say, create a new part. Right? There's a couple of ways to do it. You can start in an assembly, and then within the assembly say, now I want to create a part. Or you can create a bunch of parts, and when you're done, open an assembly and bring those parts into the assembly. So you can work from the top down or the bottom up. It's just a matter of getting comfortable with either way. Whatever you like better.

But this is an assembly. And this assembly is made up of one door. How many doors are here? Two doors. How many doors did I make? One door. Because they're both identical. So I just inserted the same door twice. So you don't have to do all the work. You can do simple things like that. It also has these triangular boards in here. And for this, I didn't model all the boards I wanted. I just modeled one. Because all I need is the dimensions of one, and I can print that out and cut as many as I want to, right?

But where Inventor really gets cool is, how do you make these connections in here, and what are you doing with this piece, and how deep are the mortars you're going to run in it, and do you want to rabbet it instead? And all those questions come up. And you can play with it. And you can see how it looks. Right? Does that look like plywood? Yeah. Does it look really bad? Not too bad, especially when you hang netting over it. It kind of looks more like a little rough and tumble, right? And that's what we wanted it to look like. So I can ask my wife, does this look good? "Yeah, this looks really cool." So you get to do stuff like that in here. And it's very easy to apply materials to things, and what have you.

So this, right here-- let me go back. Where am I? Corner cabinet. Oh, I already had it up. So there is what Inventor will spit out. And we'll see if I can zoom out to this. So in Inventor, there's a process whereby-- and you guys, I don't want to have to get into all this for the sake of time. But you can just go online, you can Google the snot out of this in YouTube and everything. It's all over the place. How do you get to this? You simply create a new file-- you say, new file from this file. And it's an IDW file, I believe. Anybody remember who knows what I'm talking about? IDW? Or either one, right. DWG or IDW. I guess they're almost identical in format.

But anyways, new IDW. And then you literally drag views from the model into here. And you can rotate these views, and you can annotate them. And I've got all my angles worked out down here. So there's a 90 on that. It's 1.41, because this is 1 inch, so 1.41 is the hypotenuse. There are some angles in here. This was awfully small. I think I blew this up-- this little tiny piece, blew it up a little bigger, maybe. I don't know. It's a little pixilated on the screen, here, but on the paper it looks sharp. But there's my top and bottom pieces. I don't remember what that top one is, but that one is right. And the doors, and the panels, and those kinds of things. So it's all worked out.

And I actually didn't do it the way I wanted to, here, but 22.125-- so 22 and 1/8, right? 21.813-- I don't remember what that was, or how I dealt with that. But you can change the units from decimal point to fraction, or whatever you want to do with it. And you know what tolerances you have to hold. So as long as I'm within a 16th, I'm good, or what have you. But this is so cool.

And here's the really, really cool part. Ready? If I go back to this-- I get back in the model, I haven't started building yet, but I already printed that out-- and my wife says, you know what? It looks a little tall in the hallway, or whatever. I think it might need to be shorter, or whatever. And I go and fix this. Guess what happens to my IDW or DWG file? Automatically updates. Yeah. And the dimensions stick. It's all done. It's nice, slick.

So this is a perfect project for that. The snake head you saw? Not doing that in Inventor, right? You're just going in there and starting to cut the thing up and have fun with it. Very, very inorganic projects. I wish I had the corner cabinet-- I may have the corner cabinet. Hold on a second here. I just didn't think of this. Let me see.

AUDIENCE: That same process in Inventor is very similar to the [INAUDIBLE] in AutoCAD. [INAUDIBLE]

PRESENTER: And it's very similar in which?

AUDIENCE: The basic plan in AutoCAD, where you've got your [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: Oh. I was not aware of that.

AUDIENCE: I'm not sure which one they pulled that from, but they're almost identical in the way they work. I teach both.

PRESENTER: Oh, OK. Yeah. No, that's perfect. See, you could have been the guy on the floor yesterday, like, "No!" All right.

AUDIENCE: I love that.

PRESENTER: Did you? Oh. Well, heck. Yeah.

AUDIENCE: One of the only advantages is you can actually retrieve all the dimensions out of your model. And then automatically take a range of it.

AUDIENCE: Right.

AUDIENCE: Come on. You're setting us up, just using an annotation scale. So you set [INAUDIBLE] in a 3/4 scale. You set it aside, so your partner and you put it up there, and then it scales your annotation and stuff on that. [INAUDIBLE]. It's really, really slick. It even includes the hidden lines, and things like that, automatically. That's why I said it's also a work in AutoCAD, as well. So I'm not sure which one they pulled it from. Inventor is a little bit more robust on the layouts, positioning of the dimensions and stuff. AutoCAD isn't [INAUDIBLE] push that backwards to AutoCAD. I teach it, and my students respond with [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: Yep. And Inventor and AutoCAD work very well together. So you can use one to inform the other. So for instance, if I have a pattern in AutoCAD and I want to bring that into Inventor, I can bring it into the Inventor sketching environment and literally copy those elements up, or sketch over them. I think you can actually just bring them into, and then dimension them, and go. So I literally take a CAD file and don't have to, like, redraw, redraw, redraw. I just insert, bring it up, and then extrude it, if you want to extrude. Or whatever option you want to use. Rotate, revolve, what have you.

This is the corner cabinet. This is very straightforward. What is this? This is a plan view. There is the elevation, right? And all four sides are identical. But the mortising is what was the trick. So if I'm mortis-down-- imagine this mortis in here, all the way down. I'd have the two boards colliding with each other, right? And what do we do when we don't do this? We end up in the shop with two boards colliding. [LAUGHING] Because our brains just can't account for everything. We think we've got it, but our brains don't. Here, it's all tracked, so we can see, visually, what's going to happen.

That was one. Another one that was very simple, very straightforward, was this one here. And you're looking at a plan view-- or, sorry, at an elevation view of a floating bookshelf. So some friends of ours-- not you. [LAUGHING] Yeah. Good to see you. Some friends of ours-- their parents, elderly parents, passed away. And they had this house. And I walked in their garage, because we were out there hunting, and I looked-- and there's piles, stacks of raw-cut, rough-sawn wood. Like, what is that?

It's pecan. Whoa, yeah. I don't know, probably 200 or 300 board feet of pecan, or more. It's insane. And unfortunately, they didn't dry it right, so a lot of it's warped, and so a lot of it's got black mold on it. So when you're out planning, it's like, go run the other way. But we ran into this pecan wood, and I said, "What are you going to do with that?" They aren't going to do anything with it. And they said, "It's all yours if you want it. Can you build this type of stuff out of it?" I'm like, sure. So they wanted a floating bookshelf.

So I took the boards out and milled them up, or planed them out, and dimensioned them, because I had to figure out where, between these two windows that they have-- this is two windows they gave me dimensions for in their house-- where are the studs? So they went and told me where the studs were. So from the left window, it was 5 inches from the window to the edge of the board, and then 12 inches from that. 12 and 5? 17. Roughly 16 inches from the edge of the window, right? So you come in 1 inch at 16, 16 on center-- studs, right? There's the stud pattern.

So what I did was I measured the back, where I would need to put these keyhole plates. And I just went, and bought some bar stock at Ace, drilled out some holes, routed it out with a dremel tool, and put those plates on the back. Literally routed the back of the wood. Put those in place and figured out how she wanted them joined. And I was sending her screenshots of the joinery. So we could do this kind of joint here, or I could do it-- everybody know what a waterfall joint is? What that means? Yes, no? Anybody not know what that is? OK.

Waterfall, it would be if I cut this-- here's the thing. If I cut it on a 45 degree and join them. But here's the thing-- it's one piece of wood. And I run the cut 45 degrees this way and that way. So I'm actually removing material. And then I bring it down. Guess what the grain does? The grain waterfalls. So it's only a waterfall joint if it was the same board where you cut it. Does that make sense?

And what's really cool about that-- and I wish I could bring up some photos of it-- is, anybody ever do any work with slabs? Have fun with that. There's some really cool things you can do with slabs. I have one slab that kind of bends. And I almost wanted to make a bench out of it, and I never could figure out what to do with it. Still in the garage, but now I know what I'm doing. I'm going to take the ends and I'm going to waterfall cut them at a slightly odd angle. So the ends, instead of facing each other, will be just slightly bent, because it follows the board. And so it will look very natural. It's going to be really cool.

So these are the kinds of things I could do with AutoCAD. I can send her these-- just take a PNG out of here, put it on Facebook, and say, hey, does this look right? Is this what you want? So they verified for me she said, yeah, I showed my husband. He measured again. Yes, this is exactly correct, place the plates there. And you can see the plate here is 12 inches from the end on that side and 14 and 5/8 on that side. Who would normally do that? No one, right? It's going to be dead center because it's being sold en masse or whatever. But you can customize. So you can do stuff like that.

What was this one here? Oh, there's the-- yeah. I had to do that, too. Is this easier to do in AutoCAD? Absolutely. Real quick and easy to do. So this is some of the things we can do there. Cancel. I didn't make changes. No. Wait. No. So, let me see. Let's go back to that.

All right. There's the corner cabinet. We have to clean up before we go. So we'll close that. All it needs is a creaking sound, right?

[MIMICS CREAKING DOOR]

Ask them for that feature. All right, let's get rid of that.

AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE]

PRESENTER: Yeah, on the ideas station. All right. So here's a bigger one. Does this lend itself to Inventor? This really lends itself to Inventor. My daughter wanted a loft bed. And actually, I put-- I don't know what they call them. Well, you see lawn chairs where they have the big mats on them, and they have the little buttons, and it just cushions all around. You know what I'm talking about? I did that cushion thing, just to see what it looked like, in Fusion. That was an easy one to do in Fusion, because it's more organic stuff that's going on there. And then put that, as a mat, down here. So you could sleep down here, if you wanted to. And these drawers, they pull out. I gave them different materials.

And then, what I did inside of here for each of the poles where you slide the runners-- the rails down, is I did a full dovetail. So what you do is you route a--

[PHONE RINGING]

Sorry. Are there any other idiots in the class that left their phone on? No? I'm the only idiot.

So anyways, I routed a full dovetail. And what you do is you route a dovetail-- does everybody know what a dovetail is? OK. Route a full dovetail down the length that you want to route, there, and slide your boards down. And then you route the other dovetail, the matching dovetail, on the end of the rail. And you can literally slide them in place. And if you do it right-- the fairly thick one-- they're very, very strong. They're not going anywhere, right? They're going to hold real well. This is with hardwood, not softwood. All bets are off on softwood.

So this is how I did all this in here. I have not built this one yet, because I didn't have all that pecan wood. But now I can build it, because I've got tons of pecan wood. So she's going to have one extremely heavy bed. So remember I said that in Inventor, we have parts and assemblies. What are we looking at here? This is an assembly of a bunch of parts. And each of these parts-- you can see, as I hover over them, what each of the parts are. They're turning red. Everybody see that on screen? Yeah. OK, you can see that. So if I go to this piece here and right-click, I can come down here to open, and it will open that part for me.

So I can go into the different parts, and I can say, I want to show this with all the drawers open. And you can put stops on it. If you don't put a stop on it, the drawer will go shooting off the screen. But you put stops on it. There. And, let's see. I was going to save it, but I forgot. If I want to just push this back to the main model without having to save and close, is that possible? Do you remember? I opened the drawer, and I want all the drawers in the model to be open, so I want to just push this back to the main model without saving and closing, or saving it. I don't think I can. I think I have to--

AUDIENCE: You're going to have to save it.

PRESENTER: You have to save it. All right. Yep. All right. I was wondering, because I haven't-- it's been a while since I've done this. And I was thinking, which way is there? Is there a shortcut? And there's not. Whoops. Let's close that. And you go back and voila, all the drawers are open. So all these models are linked. They're all alive, whatever you do with them, any changes. And they're all rules-based, too. So if you say the outside of the drawer, the drawer case, is going to be 3/4 of an inch away from the drawer side, no matter what, and then I decide to change one or the other-- that relationship being established, I only move one, and the others will move and update with them. They should. And it's called flexing your model.

And anybody that's used Revit, you can flex a Revit model as well. You can just test your model. And one of the things you want to do, whenever you're working in Inventor, and especially if you're working in the Revit family editor, is as soon as you change anything, flex it. Test it. Does it move the way you expect? If it doesn't, and you don't test it, you're going to find out 17 steps later. Yeah. Yeah. And that's where you're going to have to go outside to shake it off, come back in, so you don't throw the mouse through the wall, and back all the way up, and find out where you made a mistake. So flex after every test in Inventor or Revit. Is there a question? No? OK.

So, let me see. I don't remember what the third one was that I opened. Oh I remember what was. All right. This is kind of fun. So woodworkers, right? I bought a Minimax band saw, a 20-inch band saw. And it had a piece of crap exhaust port on the front that, when you walked by, just the breeze from you walking by breaks it. So it broke within 20 minutes of setting the thing up. And I thought, you know what. We've got 3D printers now. All right. Let's model this stupid thing, and model a better one, too. Because the way the old port looked, the old port just came straight down and stopped right out here. I don't want a hose running straight out of my machine. I want the hose to go off to the side and be out of the way, right? So let's do that.

As it turns out, what I need to do is, there's the bottom wheel door. I need to drill a hole in that, and put a collection port in there. Because as soon as you run a band saw, you can see where all the sawdust collects. So you know the best place to stick your port. Create a couple extra ports, and you have your dust collection system hooked up to it, and you're good to go. If you can't find the port attachment, which is likely, you might be able to find some common port attachment and just cut the hole in the saw to match that. You're good to go. But if you can't, you can 3D print one and drop it in resin, and it's hard. You know, epoxy resin-- hard as steel after that. So there's other things besides woodworking that you can use Inventor for. Just keep thinking outside the box. And then find a buddy that's got a 3D printer.

[LAUGHING]

So I'm going to-- let's just do this. All right. Let's do a new part, just so everybody can see what we're doing inside of Inventor. So when you first open it up, and you say, here's a new part, you have to start creating by creating a sketch. So unless you know that-- I mean, without some training, you wouldn't know it. I learned Inventor in 2001. There was no YouTube. So I went to a local reseller and got some training. Took me a week, and learned how to do everything I needed to do. And the one thing I bought it for is to be able to create flexible hose. And I said, can I create flexible hose in Inventor? And they said, sure. So I said, all right. I told my boss, we're going to go do this. We've got the venter, we've got the training.

And at the end of the training I said, all right, show me how to make the flexible hose. And the technical guy is like, what do you mean? And here's the salesman-- the salesman's standing right behind him. "I asked you, can it do flexible hose. You said yeah." Like this? No, like this. And I was trying to explain. He's showing me. I said, if you put these two parts together and put a hose here, and you move them together, the hose will flex up or flex down. Well, a venter can't do that. Anybody ever been there with the reseller? Yeah. So that was before, that was 2001. I came to Autodesk in 2007. And I swore I would never do that to anybody. But that's how I got into it. Fortunately, it does a lot of other cool things. And so it worked out.

So, when you get in, start a new sketch. And this comes up. So what is this? These are your axes and planes that you can work on. And if you hover over them, it'll tell you what this is. It'll highlight each plane. So you have front, back, left, right. You pick which one you want. OK. And depending on what plane you want to work on, you pick that plane. And now it rotates me to that plane, and now I can start drawing geometry on that plane, or line work.

So in here, if I do something simple, like a rectangle-- I can pick a rectangle with a two-point center. And if you look down here, it'll tell you what you need to do. There it says select the center. Everybody see that in the bottom-left corner, right down there? So you pick your center point, center axis here. And then you can create whatever geometry you want. So there's my rectangle. On top of that, I can come up here and put dimensions on things. So I can click this side, and there's that dimension. Let me-- could you see that OK, up there?

AUDIENCE: It's kind of light when you're actually putting in [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: So that's 5.3. And I can say, you know what? I need this to be 0.5. I put another dimension up here. And I need this to be 0.75. And so now, it's driving my geometry. And if for some reason it's not locked-- it doesn't want to lock, either.

AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE]

PRESENTER: I was just trying to drag and drop it on there.

AUDIENCE: One is the coincidental [INAUDIBLE].

AUDIENCE: Yeah.

PRESENTER: And move it off? And then--

AUDIENCE: Straight up. To the left of the other. No.

PRESENTER: I think I've got the line. Yep, I get the line. This, pick very carefully. That-- I don't know why it's not picking. Try it one more time. There's that. My mouse is too-- there we go. There. It's just hard to pick with the mouse for some reason. I guess my mouse is moving too fast. But anyways, that right there is a rectangle.

Do you start with a sketch? We could start with a circle. We could start with a circle and a line. And if I did a circle and a line, I could take the circle and then use revolve, and pick the line as my center, and redraw the circle around. Now I have a donut. And that came over as a technical term for what it is. But in here, I can either say "finish sketch," or I can just hit the E key for extrude.

And there you can see it's wanting to extrude, and here's the direction it wants to extrude. And you can control the extrusion here. You can pick a profile. So if there was a hole in the center of this, I could pick the hole or the extrusion itself. So there's what you're picking. It's going to create a solid for me. I can put in the distance that I want here. So if I want just 1 inch. And by the way, here's what's cool. What if I did this? Would it take it? Yep. Inventors, really nice. So it understands 1 millimeter versus 1 inch, and if you don't put anything on it, you're going to get 1 inch.

AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE]

PRESENTER: Oh, doesn't it? OK.

AUDIENCE: If [INAUDIBLE], it doesn't work.

PRESENTER: No kidding. Oh, wow.

AUDIENCE: You can even do math right there in that block. You can do 1 plus 3 equals 4.

PRESENTER: Yes. Yes, that's right. And--

AUDIENCE: With the dimensions, you can do that.

PRESENTER: Yep.

AUDIENCE: And you can play out all the different ones.

AUDIENCE: If you're trying to make this parametric in the future, you can actually create a variable at the same time. So this variable game equals $2,000.

PRESENTER: So-- where was it. Where's my functions? Is it manage? Here. Functions, parameters. This is an area where you can really start getting into things and creating rules. This a rule I want to use for this particular thing. But remember we talked about how far the door is going to be at work, or the side's going to be away from the box. It's going to be away from the edge. You can create rules to drive certain things in here and save those rules. And if you get really fancy with it, you can even have Excel sheets. Put a cell sheet together and it'll drive all this stuff for you as well. There's a lot you can do with it.

But this is why you use Inventor for woodworking. Because when you create these objects in here, and you start putting them together as assemblies, what you end up with is you end up with some pretty sophisticated things that weren't really that hard to build. Because the pieces are fairly straightforward. And then, putting them together is a lot of fun. That's my favorite part. You know why it's really cool, putting stuff together in Inventor? Because when you create an assembly with parts and say, import this part, and you lock it, what does it do?

[CLUCKS TONGUE]

Right, makes that sound. It's just a feeling like, yeah, baby. That's where I want it. And it works, right? It's just fun. It's like you're literally getting to play LEGOs, virtually.

AUDIENCE: I think it's a really nice [INAUDIBLE] and all kinds of stuff.

PRESENTER: Yes. Yep. You can actually spit out how many of all these objects you have. You can figure out how many linear feet of wood you're going to need for a project, perhaps. There's a lot of different things you can do with it. And I have no idea, by the way-- I asked the AU speaker staff for PowerPoint for this class. So I wanted to synthesize whatever the poor guy had into this class. And they said, there is no PowerPoint. I'm like, OK.

So that said, this is just a high-level overview of what Inventor does, and what kind of projects it's good for. And also, where AutoCAD fits into the picture. AutoCAD is very good for just plain, straightforward, box-type things. Very inorganic-type woodworking, right? Helps quickly define what my dimensions are going to be, and what's going to fit, what's going to clash. So with that, there's a couple other things I'll show everyone. And I don't know if you guys want to gather around, and I can pass these around if you want to play with them.

I'll tell you this real quick. When you want to use this one, hold the propeller near the back. If you choke up here, it won't work. So hold this near the back, hold this near the front, and then when you rub, it will make the propeller spin. And if you just say spin the other way, it stops and spins the other way. So just make sure you tell it, "Spin the other way," and it will. So there. You can play with that and pass it around, if you like.

And the reason I'm giving you these-- and I actually have finally put these into AutoCAD, as well. Because I was just making it by memory. So if you want them, email me. I think you're going to be able to get it through the speaker management, speaker center. Email me, and if you want any plans or things of the stuff that I've done, you're welcome to them. Or you want the Inventor file, and want to reverse engineer it? It's all yours. I'm happy to share anything you want.

This one here-- it's hard to see, but I carved a stick with a ball. Or when I carved it, put together a dowel and a ball. You can buy these little balls anywhere. And I carved a hook in the end. So there's a little hook in the end of that. And there's a rubber band that goes through a hole in here, and there's a hole in the end of this for the dowel to go in. And the object of this is to get this to snap back in. So if you put it in, and you know the principle of it, it'll snap back in.

But here's the hard part. It's where people get really angry with me. I hand it to them. And so we're at the table, or whatever convention, right? And they're--

[CLICKING SOUND]

Right? Finally they do this.

[KNOCKING SOUND]

Can you see that? Looks like a problem, doesn't it? Does look like it's not quite long enough? Not a problem. If you understand the principle, this works fine. I can still do this. And let's unload it.

[KNOCKING SOUND]

Right? [LAUGHING] Now they're really mad. So you can get miles and miles out of these. Now, what I'll do is I usually cut them square. This is just for fun. Cut them square, put people's logos on them, and send them a bunch. And they literally have people come to their desk. They play with it for a minute, they put their bag down, and trying to more-- they say, hang on, I'll be right back. And they go run and get their buddy and bring him over.

And like, you try it. And now they're both trying it, and neither one can get it. And they end up taking it back to their office after you show him what it does, take it back to their office and get all the other schmucks at work to fall for it. But the point was, it brought people to the desk and it was a memorable time. It was something fun that they did at this booth. There's something else about it, I can't remember what it was. But there you go. If you want to play around with it for a minute.

So what is it you guys do? What was not answered? I don't want you to walk out and go, gosh, I wish we had talked about blank. What did you want to know? What's on your minds? Anyone? Yes.

AUDIENCE: So you were talking about [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: See you, Rich.

AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE] what it's actually doing here, in [INAUDIBLE]. Using [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: Would it work for Inventor? OK.

AUDIENCE: Does the [INAUDIBLE] that you made [INAUDIBLE]?

PRESENTER: Yes.

AUDIENCE: So because [INAUDIBLE], they're going [INAUDIBLE] pattern one at a time. [INAUDIBLE]

PRESENTER: No. You don't have to choose the grain direction. It's a good question. So when you put the material on, that's when you choose what direction you want it to go on. But once you do it to one, you copy it, and I'm using that one in several places. It's all the same. Yes.

AUDIENCE: We do [INAUDIBLE] the grain direction. And that's impacted in this section.

PRESENTER: It would. If you have to hold that level of detail, it would impact your cut list, yes. So is woodworking for Inventor helping you with that?

AUDIENCE: It is. It just [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: I haven't seen anything new in it. And I don't work for Autodesk anymore, so I wouldn't know. And because we haven't signed NDAs, if I did know, I couldn't tell you. It's true.

AUDIENCE: I'm not aware of it, so.

AUDIENCE: Now, with Woodwork for Inventor, it's separate avenues.

PRESENTER: Yep.

AUDIENCE: It has its own grain tools. And you can also set up a material [INAUDIBLE]. Or you can go back to [INAUDIBLE].

AUDIENCE: That's right. And we build it with a stored picture. Stored pictures are elements of hospitals and [INAUDIBLE]. Reception desks, stuff like that.

PRESENTER: I would imagine that the tool that you have-- being that it works with Inventor, you'd be able to set up rules for wood grains so that every time you apply this, you'd have, now, a little feature that says, what angle do you want the wood grain at? And as you just change that angle, or slide it around, you'll see the wood grain changed to where you want, and then set it and go.

AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE]. Whether at an angle, or to the side. So if you want it to follow this direction, or you want it to follow this direction, [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: It may be something you have to do in here. Or it may be programmed in the API to do that. I'm not sure. But that's something that I think, all things considered, would be doable. To control your wood grain angles should not be putting a man on the moon, I don't think. So.

AUDIENCE: I just wanted to show [INAUDIBLE]. If you just brought an arrow on the sketch, and then you skewed it so it's very small, so that it would only show up in your [INAUDIBLE].

AUDIENCE: OK.

AUDIENCE: And then pump it in the direction you want it.

AUDIENCE: It's always [INAUDIBLE], but it's also blocks [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: What is your shop getting that they're fabricating from? Are they getting sheets? Are they getting a view in the computer? What are they looking at? Yeah, when you--

AUDIENCE: It's sheets.

PRESENTER: They're looking at sheets.

AUDIENCE: We used to use Google with Inventor. It was not corrected enough. Then we actually stepped back and were using [INAUDIBLE]. And we used it to separate what they're getting--

PRESENTER: OK. And that's working well enough for you? Or you still want to try and do this?

AUDIENCE: Well, whatever. [INAUDIBLE]

PRESENTER: Oh, no. No. Yeah, you would still have to build it. I worked for a reseller for a little bit after I left Autodesk, and one of the things we were going to start reselling was Woodwork for Inventor. And talk about salivating. Man, I was like, oh, I can't wait to get this. And then it fell through. So I never got a chance to try it. By the way, for all of those of you who are using these wonderful little fun tools, when we're done, before you leave, I'll show you how it actually works. I'll show you what the secret mechanism is inside. Other questions. Anything else? Thank you.

AUDIENCE: Could you use a [INAUDIBLE] on the right?

PRESENTER: Do I? No. I don't have one. What I want to get-- I want to get the laser cutter. I want the laser cutter because I make a lot of puzzles. There's some other things I want to make, too. Has anybody seen the butcher block that's got the shield? The guy with the shield-- the warrior with the shield? Let's pull this up real quick.

AUDIENCE: We actually exported the [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: It was right there. There you go. That's what I want to build. And this is perfect for Inventor or AutoCAD. And then the reason it's perfect is because it's 2D. It's really 2D. Everybody see that? So what you do is you put the 2D plan together for the base. We may not even need this. But you will need the alignment. So yeah, you will need the base in 2D. Because you're going to have to cut the mortise out of the bottom and the tenon under the foot. Right?

And by the way, under the foot, you don't have to indent the sides. Just this end. So you just cut in. So it can be flush on the sides, if you want it to. But that's all you're cutting out. And here's how it works. Is everyone familiar with DXF file format? OK. The cool thing about a DXF file format is any CNC machine in the world will take it. Whether it's 2D, 2 and 1/2 D, 3D, 5 axis, 16 axis. I don't care. They all take DXF files.

Which led me to teach a class here at AU, one time, on how to go from Revit to CNC Direct. Why? Because in Revit, if my object is actually the right size-- it's an actual, accurate object, like a gusset for steel plates, or like GIB wallboard panels-- I can actually export. I can cut the GIB wallboard with a 4-by-8 grid. And the doors, and the receptacles, and the windows, and all the cuts in the geometry will actually export out as individual DXF files. The only thing we had to write was a little thing that said if-- I pick eight objects and export as a DXF, normally, I get one file with eight objects in it. No good. I need eight files. Got it? Makes sense? All right. So we wrote a little program and it exported eight separate files. Then all you have to do is take those files and turn them to absolute 2D. So in other words, flatten them. Like flat command in AutoCAD.

So you flatten them. And now I have something that my CNC router can cut. And you literally barcode those things, right? Barcode them, send them out to the job site. Somebody scans them in with BIM 360 Field. That one goes there. That one goes there. That one goes there. And they just install. There's no more snapping lines, no more cutting boards. Holes are the perfect diameter, in the right spot. Cool stuff, right?

AUDIENCE: You do the same thing with all the plasma cutters.

PRESENTER: Exactly. Laser plasma-- the head, that cutting head or the tool, whether it's a routing tool or lathe, whatever it may be. A laser? Water jet? Doesn't matter. What's driving it is CNC, and it will follow your DXF file. Beautifully. It works wonderfully. The only thing that does not work well, I hear, is using splines. So if you're using splines, that's not going to work very well, at least for the-- there's this guy who has a water jet in Kansas City, and I wanted-- remember that snake I was cutting? It's a bear. I wanted to throw that thing in the water jet and get done with it.

Anybody know what orange Osage is? It's concrete. It's [INAUDIBLE] wood concrete, yellow concrete. So, yeah. Cutting with a handsaw is just murder. I actually built a jig to cut it in a band saw, and it worked for a while. But it's so unwieldy that the band saw finally quit cutting, and so I just used the handsaw. But he said, yeah, he's willing to give it a try. The water jets work on hardwood, he told me. He says just make sure there's no spline data in it. The jigs are going to cut.

So yeah, any CNC machine in the world-- you got a DXF? It'll take it. That's really cool stuff. So you can do things like that. And this one I really want to get to, I want to do that sometime soon.

AUDIENCE: It wasn't the lowest common denominator, DXF. Doing a-- bear with me. Some of the older machines can't think through DXF.

PRESENTER: OK. What was the common denominator file format?

AUDIENCE: Release 12.

PRESENTER: Oh. AutoCAD Release 12. Oh. So save it back as AutoCAD Release 12.

AUDIENCE: Save it back as AutoCAD. A lot of [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: Oh, OK. Did everybody hear that? Yep? OK.

AUDIENCE: The other thing Inventor is really, really good for is just really good tools for text extrusion in [INAUDIBLE]. So if you want to pull text forward and make it an extrusion where it sticks out in your part, or push it back and make it [INAUDIBLE]. It's got some really cool tools in there to do that automatically. Need it to be straight, need it to be curved? You get a lot [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: Yeah.

AUDIENCE: It has some really cool stuff you can do there. It's way easier than AutoCAD. I do a lot with 3D printing where I take some really cool pics, and I [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: By the way, these-- let's see if this comes up. Plantation shutters I built from a tree that fell outside my son's room, and turned them into plantation shutters just inside his room. So there are those. If you want to do this one, this is a fun project to do. Rockler helps you get around Inventor on this one. Really. They actually have a tool that you go to online, and you put in the dimensions of your window, and it says, OK, here's the size you're going to have to cut. Here's where you going to place the holes for each slat to go. And here's the router bit you're going to need. You know, all the stuff you've got to buy from them. But they sell you the little plugs that go in here, that hold all those in. They sell those.

And for every 20, there's one friction plug. So it actually has some. It doesn't just flop one way or the other. And you can buy those in the kit as well, which I did. I chose to buy these. And they've just done real nice. The only reason I bought them was because I wanted to see what they actually looked like the first time. From now on, I'm just going to make my own. But I book-ended as much of that as I could. Kept them all in order as I cut them. There's some natural holes in here, which I like. You can't see them, but there's a hole there, another one there. And so when the sun's going down, you can see the light beams coming through it. It's just cool. So that was a fun one to do.

Let's see if I can get this one, here. So there's a log pole bed that we built. I actually added some more struts in back, and made sure it will hold a fat guy, and it did. So it was good to go. And what it turned out was, I built this as a high bed and put it in his room. It's a king-sized bed, and it almost fills his room. And the reason I did it was because he's 15, I think, at the time. He's 17 now. My wife goes, "Oh, it'll never fit." Well, it fits.

This bed, by the way is made up of four main pieces. The front, the back, the side rails are the four main pieces. And they all fit together with a little cam that you can buy. We used to be able to get those at Rockler, too. But you have to look, now, for them. But they're a metal cam, and they're very solid. And you can see how you drill out both ends, and then slide the cam in. And then, when you push the boards together, it grabs. So you put a hex in there and turn it, and it grabs the thing and tightens it. What I found is in some cases, when I put the receiver in the vertical-- because the cam is sitting. You can barely see them, right there. There's one there, and one there. Let me see if I can zoom up to it.

I don't know if you can see that. There's one there, one there. Those are those cams. The receiver in here is just a threaded insert. And sometimes that threaded insert will just pull right out under tension. It's not enough. What you can do is you can buy a short lag bolt. Go to the hardware store and get a short lag bolt, especially if you have this much wood to work with. And what you do is you drill out the head of the lag bolt and tap it with threads. And what you have to do is, you have to route just a line across the top of the lag bolt, so you get a big screwdriver in there and screw the lag bolt in. Or if you've got enough room, overdrill the hole and use a socket wrench and screw it in. One or the other. And then, you put the receiver-- screw that into the lag bolt. Does that makes sense?

I actually have photos of this. You can go to my-- if you want, just email me and I'll send you the link to this. Because I have pictures of it in here, somewhere. In fact-- I'll look and see if I got it real quick. But there's a lot of different ways you can skin a cat. And if you guys run into problems, like "how would you deal with this," I'm happy to give it a whirl. I don't know if I can answer it. But I love trying to figure that stuff out.

We made giant Jenga not long ago. That was fun. There's a card scraper holder. That's out of orange Osage as well. Anybody in here use card scrapers? Cabinet scrapers? Yes, one? How many people use a cabinet scraper? Oh, my. Everyone else, you are missing out. What? Oh, it's a wonderful tool. It will help you get your boards so smooth, so easily, with just a couple of scrapes, that you don't have to worry about sanding. It's such a nice surface in most cases. In half the cases, I don't sand it. It's just taking a second to catch up, here. But I want to show you the linkage, and you can see how that works for the bed.

And I got kids involved, too. The kids love getting into this. And that's one of the other fun things about doing this. If you get your grandkids or your kids involved in this stuff, they are like, anything they do is accomplishment. By the way, this is a stick out of the water. In a lake in Washington state, we were on vacation and it came out of the water like that. I did not carve that. Can you believe that? It made the most beautiful cane.

There's one of the slabs I built for. And it looks like it's peeled up here, but it's not. It's just the white in there. Tree stump came out of the ground. My son said, can we turn that into a table? So we cut straight through the root base. And we're going to put glass on top of that. Anybody here know woodpeck.com, or woodpeckers? No? That's another one to look up. Some really cool tools there. Super. VerySuperCool Tools is another website. It's unbelievable. Very cool stuff, and not terribly expensive. Woodpeckers is expensive, but they just came up with a jig-- so you can stick a router in the jig, and once you get the router in the jig, your router stays at that level no matter where you move it. And you can make something glass-smooth with the right router head.

So this is the jig I used to make the ends of the log poles to go into the boards, or into the poles. So you can see this is how it looks. This is what's actually going into the bed, or into the verticals at the end. There it is, put together. And this is what I was talking about here. In some cases, if you have enough room, you can overdrill the hole. So you can just use a socket wrench and put it in this way. I didn't have that room, so I cut the head off, flattened it out, drilled the hole, tapped it, and put-- you can see it right there-- put the cross in it. So I can screw that in with a screwdriver.

And then this is the receiving end that goes into the board. All right? This assembly will stick out of the vertical. This is laying in the board. So you're going to use a forstner bit and drill a hole in the side of the board, just deep enough. And then, from the end of the board, drill another hole, so that this will slide up in that hole. Then, when you mate the two, they come together-- this end piece here fits into this hole right there. Then you just take an Allen wrench and tighten it down. This piece here-- that one there is the one that comes with the kit. And you put it in a bed like that? Boom. It's coming down.

So on his bed, we could park a car. And when I made it, I made it fairly high. And it turns out our grandkids come over, and I'm like, where are they? And we finally found them one day-- we were like, "We have lost--" What do I do, tell my daughter, "We lost your kids"? Like, where are they? And finally, we called. No answer. And we went downstairs, and we literally started looking under the beds. And as soon as we looked under Aaron's bed, there they were, asleep under the bed. In their cave, or whatever you want to call it. So I thought making it tall would be cool for him, or for storage or whatnot. But the kids all planned it. They bring TVs or gamepads and stuff under there-- all of it was underneath that bed. So this is some of the stuff you can do. And you can see the taps and whatnot up there. If you want to make things a lot, a lot easier. It does take a little bit of time to fabricate those, but not much. And it's going to last forever.

So what time are we at? It's 9:30? So we'll go in an hour, I think? I'm happy to stay the remaining 30 minutes, if there's questions. Whatever you want to do. In fact, I'll make sure I do this for everybody. Do you want to just gather round so you can see? Because it's hard to explain to you from out there. Has everybody had a chance to play with this? All right. So the easiest way to explain how this works-- and I'm telling all of you because then you can make them, and go really screw with your friends and family and whatnot-- is if I try to rub it like this, it'll never work. This will not work. It'll only work in one direction. I have to move my finger forward to the end here.

By the way, I was rushing on one of those projects for a play. I was making an elevator indicator. And I have-- do you know what grippers are? They push stuff through. I had it sitting right there. Like, I don't need that. It's like this way. I started push it through. Brought my hand back to push it more.

[BLOWS RASPBERRY]

I'm like, what was that? And then the pain hit, and I just looked and the ceiling was red.

[THUD]

So I took the tip of this finger off. Took the edge of that one off. Went through the knuckle here, and took the tip of that off. So, yeah. Use the grippers. Especially when you're rushing. So I have my finger over the edge. The reason I do that is because I want my index finger touching this side, this edge, as I'm rubbing. Or I'm going to make this back. I push it forward and my thumb touches that side. Does everybody see that? Thumb on this side, this on this side.

So if I rub this way, it spins that way. If I push forward, you see, it spins the other way. But if I choke way up, you can't see me doing this. So I'm sitting here doing this, and I go, "spin the other way," and it does it. Now, people go, "How do you do that?" You were so focused on this that when I was doing it, you weren't watching. You see me leaning on my right foot, like yeah? And then I lean on my left foot? "No way!" Coriolis effect, right? "No way." You're right, no way. That's right, I'm just kidding. Here's what it really is, right?

[BLOWING AIR OUT]

Right? And they're like, "Oh, you're blowing on it." No, I'm not doing that either. So what I'm saying is, half of it's presentation. Screw with them. Mess with their minds. Really get them going. Make up as much stuff as you want. Whatever you can think of. I mean, I've made up all sorts of things. So that's really what it is. It takes a little bit of practice, but you literally are just moving back and forth. So index finger, thumb. Index, thumb. Right? That's that one.

This one here? This one is a lot more sinister. What did I say the object to this is? Anyone remember? How many people say "hook the rubber band" is what I said? All right. Get it to snap back in. If I said "hook the rubber band," what am I doing? Lying. I can't lie. The problem is-- anybody ever seen the basketball video where there were people-- yeah, how many times did the basketball get passed? And a gorilla walks past. Ever seen that? That's what's happening here. I said the object is to get it to snap back in. And I threw you off by saying, you see this worthless hook that means nothing? Yes. Do you see this rubber band that has absolutely no use at all? Yes. The object is to get it to snap back in. Right? So what am I doing? So here's what-- I know, this is really mean. But watch. Here's what happens.

Step one. Now, by the way, when you first do it, you've got to bear down. Because if you're doing it lightly and then bear down, they see you bearing down. So you're bearing down the whole time, you're doing this, right? And you get it up to here. And when I let it go, I can even put my hand back a little bit. And then you hand it to them, and they can't do it. And so you take-- "Give me it back," and you do this. Like, what? It's not even long enough. So you do it again. And you get it to here. And then you do that. You put it back here, like this. And they're like, "What?" You know, just, "What?" And then you let them play with a little bit more.

Then here's what I do next. So you want to know how it works? You could see this rubber band, right? You can't see this one, can you? What?

[LAUGHING]

"Is this magnetic?" Then there's step four, which is, put your hand out like that. Nice and loose. A little loose, so it just slides. A little bit tighter, yeah. And I go, "Do you feel that pulling?" And I actually have people going like, "Yeah, I feel it."

[LAUGHING]

I have had people say, "I could feel it!" So what's happening is their mind is so far down there that when I show them what I'm doing is just squeezing it, they're still looking for the thing. What they cannot wrap their minds around-- this. Watermelon seed, right? That's all that's going on. So for pennies on what would normally be waste wood, stuff you throw away, you can make these. You can go online and find these balls for fairly cheap. You have to look around if you're going to make a bunch of them. It is so bad. You literally get chased out once in a while, like, "I hate you!" I've had people tell me this one's demonic.

[LAUGHING]

True.

AUDIENCE: I have a future son-in-law that's going to get teased with this.

PRESENTER: Yep. You guys can have fun. So hopefully that was a nice way to end the class. You have something cool you can do. All right.

AUDIENCE: Thank you.

PRESENTER: You're welcome. Thanks, everybody, for coming. Nice to meet you. You bet. And everybody, if you want my contact information, or want access to the Facebook page, or any resources I've got, just go through the speaker center and they'll hook you up with me. Or if you wanted it, it's wwspier-- that's my name, S-P-I-E-R-- at gmail.com. Yes. You're welcome! Yeah.

AUDIENCE: So do you try to build out your jigs and stuff in Inventor, also? Or do you--

PRESENTER: I don't know that I have. I might have, and I'm not remembering. But you can. One of the jigs I built was this one, here. So this jig here, this piece here, is one that I built. And what I do is I drill a hole in the end of the piece that I'm going to route, so it fits over that. Let's see. Trying to see where I have that. Oh, here we go. This is preparing the other piece to go into the jig. So what I'll do is hole saw it. And the hole saw not only puts the hole in there to fit over the piece, but it starts the edge for me. And then what I'm removing is-- I'm leaving this part here. This material is going away. So it's creating that plug that's going to fit into the end. It's kind of a round-- I guess you call it a round tenon, maybe?

AUDIENCE: Yeah, or you take the corner of a band saw, and you're going around, cutting to the outside out?

PRESENTER: No, no. Watch. Here, let me get out of this. So let's go to this one. There is the router head. This is a bull nose router head, I think they call it that. You see that router head down there? So as I push this into this piece, and start rotating this piece, this is removing material. And I actually have a video of that. But you can see here that it's going to remove the material, and it's going to conform to this piece here. Makes sense? So as you just push it in and rotate it, it starts to move material away.

And what I have to do is, I have to take this piece, this block here, and strap it to my router table. And I don't know if I have a photo of that or not. But it's-- right, yeah. Exactly. Use a ratchet strap and strap it down. And I do have a video on here, somewhere, of the actual router process going. But there's a good picture of it. You can see what it looks like after it's done. So all that material's removed. So there's no band saw involved. Another thing, too-- when you glue those in, if you're going to glue them in place-- and I didn't on this job. But on another one, I glued them in place.

There's structural epoxy made by System Three, I think is what it is? It's called Epoxy 88, and it's structural epoxy. And you can get it liquid or, I don't know, thicker. Real thick, like paste. And then you put it in there. You wet the wood first. Get a little bit wet so it doesn't absorb into the wood, and has a good bond. And then, when you put the two pieces together, you almost don't need hardware. It's so strong, that epoxy, that it literally is structure.

And the reason people use it is sometimes a leg or something breaks on a table, and there's no replacing it. And the material literally crumbled out, so you've got gaps. That's when you use that stuff. You put it in there and it fills those gaps, and it becomes part of the structure. It's System Three. I think it's called System Three, and Epoxy 88. System Three makes a bunch of different stuff. But Woodcraft has it. I think Rockler has it, too. But you can find it all over the place. It's not cheap, but it's worth it. Yeah. Yes.

AUDIENCE: That other tool company you mentioned, Woodpeckers?

PRESENTER: Woodpeckers and VerySuperCool Tools. Yeah. VerySuperCool Tools. Oh, you know what I forgot to mention, too? This was important. I was going to tell everyone. Anybody use a planer, like a Dewalt planer? No? Yes? The blades on those are kind of recyclable. They're just garbage.

Well, there's a new planer head, now, that replaces blades. And it has a bunch of carbide pieces that look like that, right there. What? Yes a helical blade. It's as much as the cost of the damn unit itself. But you're never replacing blades again. And if you do chip one of them on a nail head, you just unscrew that one and put a new one on, and you're back in business. Yeah. I wish I brought that up. I thought about it and forgot it later. Yeah, what they said is it's quieter, and you could take more material, like 1/16 of an inch of hardwood, in one pass. Yeah. That's really, really cool. And it comes out butter-smooth, too. Really, wow.

AUDIENCE: So they're a little offset?

PRESENTER: Well, it looks like if you took a tube and then placed them like this, all the way around. And then the next row, next to that, all the way around. But VerySuperCool Tools has-- let me go back to the main page. They have these rails that you can build anything you want to on. So you can stack these up, you can mount-- I don't know. Is that 28 using aluminum? Yeah, I don't know. I'm not that much of a metal guy. Might be. But you can mount boards to that.

Let me see. Oh, that's Gabriel's. Where is it? What do we call it. Fence. There you go. You can mount these boards to it. It even has the JessEm board auxiliary mount to it, if you want that. There's some really cool things on here. Let me see if I can do this. Dewalt planer helix. See if that brings up anything. Byrd, yes. Byrd is one. There's another one that has even higher ratings than Byrd. But there it is. That's how it looks. And each one of these little guys has an Allen head bolt in the center.

So you just-- are they? OK. I have no idea. OK. Oh, I see. Oh. That's true. Holy smokes. Thank you. Very cool. That's right. Well, come this Christmas, I'll be $400 poorer and know everything about what you just said. I think it is. I use it so much. It's absolutely worth it, for me. It's easier on the machine, everything. They got one guy to replace that. He also replaced the ejector fan, because the ejector fan had taken such a beating from the chips off the old one. He replaced both, and he said it's like a new machine. OK.

AUDIENCE: The way that it sits [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: Yep. Same with the Dewalt. Do you have that in there now? They said that removes that problem, too. Yes, that was in the reviews.

AUDIENCE: Because the heads usually [INAUDIBLE]. But it's got two spindles.

PRESENTER: Do you have the extension boards on it?

AUDIENCE: I did, actually. When I had a longer extension to go inside of it.

PRESENTER: Yep.

PRESENTER: Even though you're holding the board steady? Wow. Because I can get mine to stop. If I hold that board steady, it runs. Does a good job. But they said with this-- that one guy said that's gone, now. He doesn't have that problem. That's smart. A lot of sacrifice. Because you're doing multiple passes on one board.

AUDIENCE: One of my [INAUDIBLE] is a lot of times, I'll hold the lag.

PRESENTER: Oh. You know what else you could do? You could run a longer board under the board you actually want to work on. Right, right. No, I mean-- oh, OK. I would still pick it up, maybe.

AUDIENCE: I have a four-foot table that I just set inside my planer.

PRESENTER: Yeah.

AUDIENCE: So then, when I cut through it, it's not wobbling, at all.

PRESENTER: OK. Still does that. Oh. That's a design flaw.

AUDIENCE: Then once you're [INAUDIBLE], you're making it a lot good for your drivers.

PRESENTER: Yeah. Oh, wow. She must've just freaked.

AUDIENCE: She wanted a design center. This one with the whiteboard, so she could--

PRESENTER: Oh, yeah.

AUDIENCE: This is pushpins. This one folds down. The one inside folds down. And all the stairs going up-- you lift them up. They're on hinges. And they're storage.

PRESENTER: Yep

AUDIENCE: And at the very top one, the ladder is so she can go hide inside it.

PRESENTER: (LAUGHING) Oh. That.

AUDIENCE: Put a bookshelf on top.

PRESENTER: Do you know when that's going to double in value?

AUDIENCE: This was all done just on the fly.

PRESENTER: That's pretty nice. When she has kids, that will double in value.

AUDIENCE: All right.

AUDIENCE: I built an art box for my daughter. She loves to do art and stuff.

PRESENTER: Oh, nice. Felt-lined, too?

AUDIENCE: No, I didn't put felt lining in it.

PRESENTER: Oh, it looked like it. That's what I thought. Maybe it was brown felt. It looks nice. Did you join the ends, or corners?

AUDIENCE: Yeah.

PRESENTER: With what? Is it just a rabbet joint?

AUDIENCE: I just used a rabbet.

PRESENTER: OK.

AUDIENCE: We used those to bring down the plywood and stuff. To use the router to move the joints and stuff. She got that for Christmas last year. I did it all in Inventor, so I could try to figure out the spacing.

PRESENTER: And that's what it's for. You get in there and you start figuring out what are those little minutia things that absolutely make you want to throw yourself off a cliff? After all that work, and you did it wrong. And now you have to start over. That's where Inventor comes in and says, you made the mistake here in pixels.

AUDIENCE: They wanted me to make them a TV cabinet, first. Barbie.

PRESENTER: Yep. So there's a motor in there?

AUDIENCE: So I put an electric motor in the TV, and then the lid just-- when it goes down, it's--

PRESENTER: Soft close.

AUDIENCE: Just a soft close. On top of it, to get those dimensions and everything, I took a little bit of [INAUDIBLE] without the--

PRESENTER: Yeah, say. Because when you get that lid to come down, it has to be just the right gap.

AUDIENCE: When the lid was down, you couldn't tell it that it would lift. Because it was all matched up and everything.

AUDIENCE: Right.

AUDIENCE: That was another one. I designed my own dust collection system. My wife works for an HVAC company, and you're always getting extra blowers and stuff off the furnaces. So I made my own.

PRESENTER: Dust collector off of--

AUDIENCE: Yeah. Just take a blower on that.

AUDIENCE: Well, what, did you just put the blower through--

AUDIENCE: Yeah, I just had two trash cans that I drilled some holes in, for the material. And then I just used some-- actually, that's the same filter that works on my--

PRESENTER: On your house?

AUDIENCE: --dust collector that I have over my shower. So it uses the same filters for my overhead dust collector, and then I just put a furnace filter in there for ejection, so I could-- yeah. The forks just come at the top. It doesn't do too bad. A commercial one has a little more horsepower behind it, but it's not too bad. It helps keep the dust down for the most part.

AUDIENCE: Yeah.

PRESENTER: Do you mind if I get your card? Oh, thank you.

AUDIENCE: Well, we know each other. I think we've done--

PRESENTER: Oh my gosh!

AUDIENCE: --out of Kansas City.

PRESENTER: Sure. Look at that. I didn't know that.

AUDIENCE: I knew the name sounded familiar. And then you said you were from KC.

PRESENTER: Yep Blue Springs. Oh, super. Thank you. I will be in touch you. Because I have that motor. I was going to use it for an exhaust fan to the attic. But who knows?

AUDIENCE: Can I get your email address again?

PRESENTER: wwspier@gmail.com. Yeah. Yeah, you're welcome. I'm glad you enjoyed it. Blue Springs, Missouri. Just east of Kansas City, just east of the football stadium.

AUDIENCE: I get my wife, whenever [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: Oh, are you? OK. Nice.

AUDIENCE: Just my hobby.

PRESENTER: Yeah, well, stay in touch.

AUDIENCE: Yeah.

PRESENTER: I like that bed. What did your daughter do when she saw that?

AUDIENCE: Oh, she's-- it was for Christmas. She still sleeps in it. She's 17.

PRESENTER: That's how old that photo is. Wow.

AUDIENCE: We've moved three houses. It's always like [INAUDIBLE].

PRESENTER: Oh, really.

AUDIENCE: Yeah, every time.

PRESENTER: Do you have to tear down?

AUDIENCE: We'd have to take it apart.

PRESENTER: Those connectors I was showing you? They're not cheap, but they're not dealbreakers. Look around online for them. They're actually metric. But it doesn't matter. You can use a standard imperial forstner bit. You're good to go.

______
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Nous faisons appel à Adobe Analytics pour collecter des données comportementales sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP, d'ID d'appareil et d'ID Autodesk. Ces données nous permettent de mesurer les performances de nos sites et d'évaluer la qualité de votre expérience en ligne afin d'améliorer les fonctionnalités que nous proposons. Grâce à des méthodes d'analytique avancées, nous optimisons également votre expérience dans les domaines suivants : communication par e-mail, assistance client et ventes. Politique de confidentialité de Adobe Analytics
Google Analytics (Web Analytics)
Nous faisons appel à Google Analytics (Web Analytics) pour collecter des données comportementales sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces données nous permettent de mesurer les performances de nos sites et d'évaluer la qualité de votre expérience en ligne afin d'améliorer les fonctionnalités que nous proposons. Grâce à des méthodes d'analytique avancées, nous optimisons également votre expérience dans les domaines suivants : communication par e-mail, assistance client et ventes. Politique de confidentialité de Google Analytics (Web Analytics)
AdWords
Nous faisons appel à AdWords pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par AdWords. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de AdWords et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que AdWords a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à AdWords nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de AdWords
Marketo
Nous faisons appel à Marketo pour vous envoyer des e-mails dont le contenu est ciblé. Pour ce faire, nous collectons des données concernant votre comportement en ligne et votre interaction envers les e-mails que nous envoyons. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP, d'ID d'appareil, de taux d'ouverture des e-mails, de clics sur des liens, etc. Nous sommes susceptibles d'utiliser ces données en combinaison envers celles obtenues auprès d'autres sources pour vous offrir des expériences améliorées en matière de ventes ou de service clientèle, ainsi que du contenu pertinent basé sur un traitement analytique avancé. Politique de confidentialité de Marketo
Doubleclick
Nous faisons appel à Doubleclick pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par Doubleclick. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de Doubleclick et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que Doubleclick a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à Doubleclick nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de Doubleclick
HubSpot
Nous faisons appel à HubSpot pour vous envoyer des e-mails dont le contenu est ciblé. Pour ce faire, nous collectons des données concernant votre comportement en ligne et votre interaction envers les e-mails que nous envoyons. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP, d'ID d'appareil, de taux d'ouverture des e-mails, de clics sur des liens, etc. Politique de confidentialité de HubSpot
Twitter
Nous faisons appel à Twitter pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par Twitter. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de Twitter et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que Twitter a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à Twitter nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de Twitter
Facebook
Nous faisons appel à Facebook pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par Facebook. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de Facebook et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que Facebook a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à Facebook nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de Facebook
LinkedIn
Nous faisons appel à LinkedIn pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par LinkedIn. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de LinkedIn et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que LinkedIn a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à LinkedIn nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de LinkedIn
Yahoo! Japan
Nous faisons appel à Yahoo! Japan pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par Yahoo! Japan. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de Yahoo! Japan et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que Yahoo! Japan a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à Yahoo! Japan nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de Yahoo! Japan
Naver
Nous faisons appel à Naver pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par Naver. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de Naver et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que Naver a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à Naver nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de Naver
Quantcast
Nous faisons appel à Quantcast pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par Quantcast. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de Quantcast et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que Quantcast a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à Quantcast nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de Quantcast
Call Tracking
Nous faisons appel à Call Tracking pour fournir des numéros de téléphone personnalisés dans le cadre de nos campagnes. Vous pouvez ainsi contacter nos agents plus rapidement et nous pouvons évaluer nos performances plus précisément. Nous sommes susceptibles de collecter des données sur votre utilisation de nos sites en fonction du numéro de téléphone fourni. Politique de confidentialité de Call Tracking
Wunderkind
Nous faisons appel à Wunderkind pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par Wunderkind. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de Wunderkind et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que Wunderkind a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à Wunderkind nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de Wunderkind
ADC Media
Nous faisons appel à ADC Media pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par ADC Media. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de ADC Media et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que ADC Media a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à ADC Media nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de ADC Media
AgrantSEM
Nous faisons appel à AgrantSEM pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par AgrantSEM. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de AgrantSEM et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que AgrantSEM a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à AgrantSEM nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de AgrantSEM
Bidtellect
Nous faisons appel à Bidtellect pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par Bidtellect. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de Bidtellect et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que Bidtellect a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à Bidtellect nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de Bidtellect
Bing
Nous faisons appel à Bing pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par Bing. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de Bing et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que Bing a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à Bing nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de Bing
G2Crowd
Nous faisons appel à G2Crowd pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par G2Crowd. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de G2Crowd et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que G2Crowd a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à G2Crowd nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de G2Crowd
NMPI Display
Nous faisons appel à NMPI Display pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par NMPI Display. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de NMPI Display et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que NMPI Display a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à NMPI Display nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de NMPI Display
VK
Nous faisons appel à VK pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par VK. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de VK et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que VK a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à VK nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de VK
Adobe Target
Nous faisons appel à Adobe Target afin de tester les nouvelles fonctionnalités de nos sites et de personnaliser votre expérience. Pour ce faire, nous collectons des données comportementales lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP, d'ID d'appareil, d'ID Autodesk, etc. La version de nos sites peut varier en fonction des tests de fonctionnalités. Le contenu, quant à lui, peut être personnalisé en fonction de vos attributs de visiteur. Politique de confidentialité de Adobe Target
Google Analytics (Advertising)
Nous faisons appel à Google Analytics (Advertising) pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par Google Analytics (Advertising). Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de Google Analytics (Advertising) et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que Google Analytics (Advertising) a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à Google Analytics (Advertising) nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de Google Analytics (Advertising)
Trendkite
Nous faisons appel à Trendkite pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par Trendkite. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de Trendkite et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que Trendkite a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à Trendkite nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de Trendkite
Hotjar
Nous faisons appel à Hotjar pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par Hotjar. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de Hotjar et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que Hotjar a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à Hotjar nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de Hotjar
6 Sense
Nous faisons appel à 6 Sense pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par 6 Sense. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de 6 Sense et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que 6 Sense a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à 6 Sense nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de 6 Sense
Terminus
Nous faisons appel à Terminus pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par Terminus. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de Terminus et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que Terminus a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à Terminus nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de Terminus
StackAdapt
Nous faisons appel à StackAdapt pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par StackAdapt. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de StackAdapt et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que StackAdapt a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à StackAdapt nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de StackAdapt
The Trade Desk
Nous faisons appel à The Trade Desk pour afficher des publicités numériques sur les sites pris en charge par The Trade Desk. Les publicités sont basées à la fois sur les données de The Trade Desk et sur les données comportementales que nous collectons lorsque vous naviguez sur nos sites. Il peut s'agir de pages visitées, de versions d'évaluation activées, de vidéos lues, d'achats, d'adresses IP ou d'ID d'appareil. Ces informations sont susceptibles d'être fusionnées envers des données que The Trade Desk a collectées sur vous. Les données que nous fournissons à The Trade Desk nous servent à personnaliser les publicités numériques afin de les rendre plus pertinentes. Politique de confidentialité de The Trade Desk
RollWorks
We use RollWorks to deploy digital advertising on sites supported by RollWorks. Ads are based on both RollWorks data and behavioral data that we collect while you’re on our sites. The data we collect may include pages you’ve visited, trials you’ve initiated, videos you’ve played, purchases you’ve made, and your IP address or device ID. This information may be combined with data that RollWorks has collected from you. We use the data that we provide to RollWorks to better customize your digital advertising experience and present you with more relevant ads. RollWorks Privacy Policy

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Nous souhaitons vous offrir une expérience optimale. Si vous choisissez Oui pour les catégories présentées dans l'écran précédent, nous collecterons vos données et les utiliserons afin de personnaliser votre expérience et d'améliorer nos applications. Vous pouvez modifier vos paramètres à tout moment en accédant à notre Déclaration de confidentialité.

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Nous respectons votre confidentialité. Les données que nous collectons nous aident à comprendre votre utilisation de nos produits, à identifier les informations susceptibles de vous intéresser, mais aussi à améliorer et à valoriser votre engagement envers Autodesk.

Nous autorisez-vous à collecter et à utiliser vos données afin de personnaliser votre expérience ?

Découvrez tous les avantages d'une expérience personnalisée. Vous pouvez gérer vos paramètres confidentialité pour ce site. Pour en savoir plus sur les options disponibles, consultez notre Déclaration de confidentialité.