A very interesting approach. Thank you for sharing.
I can understand the appeal of using this, or a similar, CAD program. The primary attraction for myself would be the highly accurate visual image achieved without having hand drawing abilities. I can do rough (very rough) sketches but nothing on the scale of accuracy that a CAD program can do. But for the actual building of the windscreen, I think I'd stick to my cardboard model approach. First do a mockup, then step back and see how it looks. Keep changing and tweaking that until satisfied. Cutting of the wood comes from many years experience. I'm not exactly sure how I know how I do it, but it gets done. (There is, I admit, a pile of scrap trial cut pieces at the end. The height of the pile is usually in direct proportion to the complexity of the job at hand.)
A very interesting approach. Thank you for sharing.
I can understand the appeal of using this, or a similar, CAD program. The primary attraction for myself would be the highly accurate visual image achieved without having hand drawing abilities. I can do rough (very rough) sketches but nothing on the scale of accuracy that a CAD program can do. But for the actual building of the windscreen, I think I'd stick to my cardboard model approach. First do a mockup, then step back and see how it looks. Keep changing and tweaking that until satisfied. Cutting of the wood comes from many years experience. I'm not exactly sure how I know how I do it, but it gets done. (There is, I admit, a pile of scrap trial cut pieces at the end. The height of the pile is usually in direct proportion to the complexity of the job at hand.)