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CAD and Modeling
The Design workspace is where Cindr3D behaves like a browser-based CAD tool. It is aimed at practical printable parts, fixture design, workshop utilities, and quick iteration.

Use the 3D viewport to inspect and manipulate parts.
Common actions:
- Orbit, pan, and zoom around the model
- Use the view cube for standard orientations
- Toggle visibility from the component tree
- Inspect the feature timeline to understand how the model was built
- Use selection filters when a dense model has overlapping bodies, sketches, or features
Sketches can be created on the XY, XZ, or YZ plane. Sketch geometry is dimensioned in millimeters by default.
Common sketch entities:
- Line
- Circle
- Rectangle
- Arc
- Text
- Polygon or closed profile
Best practice:
- Start with simple, closed profiles.
- Add dimensions early so the design stays intentional.
- Keep construction geometry separate from printable profiles when possible.
- Resolve over-constrained sketches before adding features.
Solid features turn sketches and bodies into printable geometry.
Available feature families include:
- Extrude
- Revolve
- Sweep
- Loft
- Shell
- Rib
- Split
- Draft
- Hole
- Thread
- Chamfer
- Fillet
For parts that need later edits, prefer feature-driven geometry over one-off mesh operations. That keeps the timeline useful and makes variants easier to maintain.
The parametric model library is intended for reusable printable parts and hardware-ready starter geometry.
Examples:
- Gridfinity bins
- Threaded insert bosses
- Brackets
- Project boxes
- Cable clips
- Gear blanks
Use these as starting points, then adjust dimensions and downstream features to match the final print.
Configurations let one design carry multiple named variants.
Use configurations for:
- Size variants
- Left/right versions
- Different hole patterns
- Material-specific wall thicknesses
- Feature suppression per variant
- Variant export
Keep configuration names descriptive so exported files and future edits stay understandable.
The drawing workspace can generate orthographic views from the model.
Supported output targets include:
- SVG
- DXF
Use drawings when you need a shop-facing reference, a dimensioned review artifact, or a 2D export for another tool.
Mesh repair tools help prepare imported geometry for printing.
Common checks and fixes:
- Manifold report
- Duplicate-vertex weld
- Normal repair
- Normal flip
- Auto-fix
- STL import healing
If an imported STL slices strangely, run mesh checks before tuning slicer settings.
Common import targets include:
.f3d.step.stp.stl.obj
Common export targets include:
- Cindr3D project/session bundles
- STL
- STEP
- G-code through the active slicing flow
For printable sharing, STL is the broadest target. For editable downstream CAD, prefer STEP when available.
- Home
- Getting Started
- Operator Runbooks
- Guided Tutorials
- Feature Overview
- AI Assistant and MCP
- Self Hosting and Updates
- CAD and Modeling
- Design Box Walkthrough
- Sketching and Dimensions
- CAD Features and Timeline
- Drawing and Export Workflows
- Mesh Repair and Imports
- Slicing and Print Preview
- Slicer Settings Reference
- Prepare Object Walkthrough
- Prepare Profiles and Printer Creation
- G-code Preview Simulation and Breakpoints
- Calibration Workflows
- Printer Workflows
- Printer Connection Setup
- USB Connection (Web Serial)
- Camera Setup
- Printer Interface Gallery
- Print Farm Intelligence
- Filament Profiles
- Mid-print Object Cancellation
- Print Tuning and Utilities
- Safety Limits
- Dashboard Layout Editing