RC-1.1-BP1-MQ60

Welcome to Phone Stand Engineering!

Get ready to design something useful! In this microQuest, you will learn how to combine different shapes in Tinkercad to create a functional phone stand.

Your goal is to build a stand that can actually hold a phone by creating a stable base, a backrest, and a small lip to keep the phone from sliding off.

This activity introduces the core concept of Functional 3D Design.

Building the Foundation

Every good structure needs a solid foundation. Your phone stand will start with three basic shapes that you will modify.

  1. Find the shape library on the side of the screen.
  2. Drag a shape that will work as the base of your stand onto the blue workplane.
  3. Drag a shape that will work as the backrest onto the workplane.
  4. Drag a shape that will work as the lip that holds the phone onto the workplane.
  • Placing Your First Blocks

Shaping Your Stand

Now that you have the basic shapes, let's change their size and shape to fit the purpose of a phone stand.

  1. Select the shape you chose for the base.
  2. Use the small squares (handles) to make it flat and wide enough for a phone to sit on.
  3. Select the shape you chose for the backrest.
  4. Use the handles to make it tall enough to support a phone and thin.
  5. Select the shape you chose for the lip.
  6. Use the handles to make it small and flat, like a small ledge.
  7. Move the shapes roughly into position on the workplane, near where they should connect.
  • Placing Your First Blocks

Lining Things Up

To make your stand stable and look good, the parts need to be perfectly lined up. The Align tool is perfect for this.

  1. Select all three shapes you have placed on the workplane.
  2. Find and click the Align button in the toolbar.
  3. Click the alignment dots that appear to center the backrest and the lip side-to-side on the base.
  4. Click the alignment dots to bring the backrest and the lip to the front edge of the base, where they will connect.
  • Lining It All Up
  • Engineering a Phone Stand

Making It Solid

Right now, your stand is made of three separate pieces. To make it a single, strong object ready for 3D printing, you need to group them.

  1. Make sure all three aligned shapes are still selected.
  2. Find and click the Group button in the toolbar.
  3. Observe how the shapes combine into one single object, usually changing to a single color.
  • Creating Your First Keychain
  • Designing a Custom Bookmark
  • Engineering a Phone Stand

Your Functional Stand!

Congratulations! You have successfully designed a functional phone stand by combining multiple shapes, aligning them precisely, and grouping them into one object.

Take a moment to look at your design from different angles using the view cube. Does it look stable? Does it look like it could hold a phone?

You have completed the design phase of engineering a functional object!

  • Engineering a Phone Stand

Documentation

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Practice and Intro to Tinkercad

This document guides you through your first steps in using Tinkercad, a fun tool for designing 3D objects.

First Steps in the Workshop

In this microQuest, you will learn to navigate the Tinkercad workplane. You will identify the main toolbar and the shape library, which is where you find all the building blocks for your designs. You will also practice changing your view of the workplane using the view cube. This helps you get comfortable moving around and seeing your designs from different angles in the 3D space.

This activity introduces the core concept of Tinkercad Interface Navigation.

Placing Your First Blocks

Now you will start putting shapes onto the workplane. Your objective is to drag and drop three different basic shapes from the shape library onto the blue workplane. You can pick shapes like a box, a cylinder, and a sphere. Once they are on the workplane, you will click on each shape. Little squares called handles will appear. You will use these handles to make each shape bigger or smaller, taller or shorter, changing their size independently.

This activity introduces the core concept of Manipulating Basic Shapes.

Lining It All Up

Sometimes you need shapes to be perfectly lined up. In this microQuest, you will place two shapes on the workplane. Then you will use a special tool called the Align tool. You will select both shapes, click the Align button, and then click on the dots that appear to line up the shapes exactly in the middle, side-to-side and front-to-back. This helps you make neat and precise designs.

This activity introduces the core concept of Aligning Objects.

Creating Your First Keychain

Now you will make something useful: a keychain. Your objective is to design a simple keychain shape. You will start with a flat shape for the main part. Then you will add a smaller shape, like a cylinder, where the hole for the key ring will go. You will change the smaller shape into a 'Hole'. A Hole shape is see-through and is used to cut away from other shapes. Finally, you will select both shapes and use the Group tool. Grouping a solid shape with a Hole shape makes the Hole shape cut away from the solid shape, creating an actual hole.

This activity introduces the core concept of Grouping and Subtractive Modeling (Holes).

Designing a Custom Bookmark

Let's make a bookmark. In this microQuest, you will design a simple bookmark by putting together at least three different shapes. You could use a long rectangle for the main part, add a star on top, and maybe put some text on it. You will use the Align tool to make sure everything is lined up nicely. Then you will use the Group tool to combine all the shapes into one single object.

This activity introduces the core concept of Complex Object Composition.

Engineering a Phone Stand

Now you will design something that can hold a phone. Your objective is to design a functional phone stand that works. You will use multiple shapes to build it. You will need a flat base so it doesn't fall over. You will need a back part for the phone to lean against. You might need a small lip at the front to stop the phone from sliding off. You will need to make sure all the parts are in the right place using the Align tool. Then you will use the Group tool to make it one strong object.

This activity introduces the core concept of Functional 3D Design.

Preparing for Print

Your phone stand is designed! Now you need to get it ready for a 3D printer. In this microQuest, you will select your finished phone stand design. Then you will use the Export button. You will choose to download the design as an .stl file. This is a special type of file that 3D printers understand. Once you have the .stl file, it's ready to be sent to a 3D printer.

This activity introduces the core concept of Exporting for 3D Printing (.stl).

Design Showcase

You have finished designing your phone stand and saved it as an .stl file. Your objective is to present your .stl file. You will explain how you made your phone stand. Talk about the shapes you used. Explain how you used the Align tool to line things up. Explain how you used the Group tool to combine shapes. If you used any Holes, explain how they worked. This is where you share what you learned and show off your design.

This activity introduces the core concept of Design Rationale and Presentation.