Allo olivier,

I can't remember for what software/format the models where coming from. But
MoI http://moi3d.com turned out to be the perfect tool to transfer from. I
remember that much, the models where they came from were used to print toys
for Leapfrog, like the leapster for instance. Not free, however you can
certainly give the trial version a dry run.

Hope this helps,

Ludo

Ludovick William Michaud
mobile: *214.632.6756*
*www.linkedin.com/in/ludovickwmichaud*
+Shading / Lighting / Compositing
+CG Supervisor / Sr. Technical Director / Creative Director



On Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 3:15 PM, olivier jeannel <[email protected]>wrote:

> Hi guys,
>
> Next week I shall receive a mecanical pieces generated with Solidworks.
> Because I'm dealing with an agency, they might won't be able to send an obj
> or fbx file.
> They propose various formats :
> Assemblage or Assembly (.asm)
> Part (.prt)
> Parasolid (.x_t)
> Iges (.igs)
> Step AP203 or AP214 (.stp)
> IFC 2x3 (.ifc)
> ACIS (.sat)
> STL (.stl)
> VRML (.wrl)
> Universal3D (.u3d)
> 3Dxml (.3dxml)
> Catia Graphics (.cgr)
>
> So my question is, what format should I ask and what software would you
> recomend  to open and save it in a classic polymesh format ? (preferably
> free...)
>
> I have an old Deep Exploration, I was thinking giving it a try. But if
> someone has a cool winning format + software to advice...
>
> Thank you !
>
> Olivier
>
>
>
>

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