Joint Push Pull Interactive Free <Easy>
This is where the tool shines. Instead of just moving up and down, you can manipulate the shape while extruding.
For the last activity, the facilitator handed out square fabric patches. Without planning, each person stitched a small motif and then passed the patch. The receiving person could either add a push — a bold color, a geometric slash — or a pull — a muted stitch, a border that contained the previous mark. When the patches returned full-circle, they were sewn into a quilt. The final piece held a lively cadence of contrasts: bright stitches interrupting quiet ones, seams that both linked and held apart.
The quilt was free in spirit and cost: made from leftover cloth, anonymous hands, and the generosity of time. It embodied the workshop's lesson: joint action, alternating force and restraint, creating something none of them could have imagined alone. joint push pull interactive free
Once installed, you can access the toolbar via View > Toolbars > JointPushPull. There are three main modes:
"It says 'Operation Failed' or 'Invalid Face'" This is where the tool shines
"My toolbar disappeared!"
"Where can I get it for free safely?"
Best for: Physics and Biomechanics teachers. While PhET is famous for circuit builders, their Forces and Motion and Balancing Act simulations are perfect for joint mechanics. Use the "Tug of War" simulation to understand net force. While it is not a human elbow, it visualizes the push-pull dynamic on a pivot point (the joint). It is 100% HTML5, works on iPads, and is completely free.