petokosun Posted June 7, 2008 Posted June 7, 2008 please could anyone explain how newton physics is applied to animation master Quote
Fuchur Posted June 8, 2008 Posted June 8, 2008 please could anyone explain how newton physics is applied to animation master If you need deeper informations on the plugin, you should have a talk to steffen. If you only want to know how to use it: Go to the model and in the properties, you will find "Plugin Properties -> Newton dynamics"... Thats all you have to set. After that, go to the choreography and rightclick in it. Choose "-> Plugins -> Simulate Newton" and wait a few moments. Thats all. You can play with the settings a bit, but in the end, that is all it takes. *Fuchur* Quote
Caroline Posted June 8, 2008 Posted June 8, 2008 In TaoA:M there is an Exercise 17, which uses Dynamics. A while ago I wrote an alternative method using Steffen's Newton Physics plugin (it's a small pdf document): http://www.hash.com/forums/index.php?act=a...st&id=23696 That should give you the basic principle. Here you will find the usage of the other things it can do: http://www.hash.com/NewtonPhysics/ And here are the example movies that have been created using the plugin: http://www.hash.com/NewtonPhysics/samples.html Quote
petokosun Posted June 8, 2008 Author Posted June 8, 2008 thanks caro u pointed me to what i wanted Quote
petokosun Posted August 4, 2008 Author Posted August 4, 2008 though i ve not tried this. i was wonder. does real calculations of newtons physics works in AM. like gravitational formular, force (f is equal ma) and so on. has any one every tried this. Quote
mouseman Posted August 5, 2008 Posted August 5, 2008 though i ve not tried this. i was wonder. does real calculations of newtons physics works in AM. like gravitational formular, force (f is equal ma) and so on. has any one every tried this. I've only played a little bit with it. I believe it does quite well at mass, gravity, inertia/momentum (both vector and rotational), and friction (static and dynamic). It also does explosions. I think you can add other forces, as well, but I'm not sure. See the NewtonPhysics page (oops, you already saw it), and the NewtonPhysics forum. Quote
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