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You're reading from  Designing Purpose-Built Drones for Ardupilot Pixhawk 2.1

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Published inDec 2017
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781786469168
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Ty Audronis
Ty Audronis
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Ty Audronis

Ty Audronis has been called a "technology-age renaissance man." Hes a professional drone pilot, post-production specialist in the entertainment and media industries, a highly experienced interactive game developer, and an accomplished digital artist. Hes worked for companies ranging from frog Design to California Academy of Sciences in roles where hes worn many hats. Tys been programming software and games since 1981 (when he was 8 years old) professionally. He majored in Computer Generated Animation and Visual Effects in college (where he won Best Animation for the entire CSU system a Rosebud Award). His music and sound design have been the soundtrack on several major productions; he has also served as a visual effects supervisor on feature films and was the supervising editor and animator for award-winning science visualizations. He has been building drones since the days when sensors and components had to be torn out of cell phones and game controllers. Ty is also a mentor, having taught many interns his skills, and speaks regularly at venues including Interdrone. He also serves on the advisory board for the Society of Aerial Cinematographers and for Genarts (now Boris) Sapphire.
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Designing the duck body for 3D printing


Even if you don't own a 3D printer, designing for one is handy. Plus, you can always ship your designs off to a friend, or service that does have such a device. You should eventually get one though, and they are relatively inexpensive nowadays.

One of the beauties of Computer Aided Design (CAD) is that you don't actually have to use CAD software to create objects in the real world. Confused? Don't be. CAD design and 3D animation software use very similar methodologies for modeling objects. They even share (some) file formats. And any 3D modeling software (worth its salt) can import and export in CAD formats.

You don't have to spend a boatload on AutoCAD or SolidWorks to create and prototype your designs. These programs can cost thousands of dollars (per year, or even per month) to own. Instead, you can use free software such as Blender to model your objects. The additional benefit to these easily accessed software packages is that there are tons of YouTube...

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Designing Purpose-Built Drones for Ardupilot Pixhawk 2.1
Published in: Dec 2017Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781786469168

Author (1)

author image
Ty Audronis

Ty Audronis has been called a "technology-age renaissance man." Hes a professional drone pilot, post-production specialist in the entertainment and media industries, a highly experienced interactive game developer, and an accomplished digital artist. Hes worked for companies ranging from frog Design to California Academy of Sciences in roles where hes worn many hats. Tys been programming software and games since 1981 (when he was 8 years old) professionally. He majored in Computer Generated Animation and Visual Effects in college (where he won Best Animation for the entire CSU system a Rosebud Award). His music and sound design have been the soundtrack on several major productions; he has also served as a visual effects supervisor on feature films and was the supervising editor and animator for award-winning science visualizations. He has been building drones since the days when sensors and components had to be torn out of cell phones and game controllers. Ty is also a mentor, having taught many interns his skills, and speaks regularly at venues including Interdrone. He also serves on the advisory board for the Society of Aerial Cinematographers and for Genarts (now Boris) Sapphire.
Read more about Ty Audronis