palla Modelli 3D Gratuiti

Abbiamo 137 oggetto(i) Senza royalty ball Modelli 3D.

Filtro
$5
$1500
  1. Ping-pong Modello 3D
  2. Sfera di cristallo Modello 3D
  3. Animazione galattica Modello 3D
  4. Palla di Natale Modello 3D
  5. Palla di Natale Modello 3D
  6. Palla di Natale Modello 3D
  7. Palla di Natale Modello 3D
  8. Palla di Natale Modello 3D
  9. Palla di neve in vetro Modello 3D
  10. Palle di Natale Modello 3D
  11. Pallone da calcio Modello 3D
  12. Palla da basket Modello 3D
  13. Pallone da calcio Modello 3D
  14. Pokéball Modello 3D
  15. PALLA DA GOLF Modello 3D
  16. Cuscinetto a sfere Modello di stampa 3D
  17. Pallone da calcio sull'erba Modello 3D
  18. Sfera di legno Modello 3D
  19. Palla Modello 3D
  20. Pallone da calcio Modello 3D
  21. Mazza da golf e pallina da golf Modello 3D
  22. Palla Pokemon Modello 3D
  23. Pallone da calcio Modello 3D
  24. Modello di palla 3D Modello 3D
  25. palla da pallavolo Modello 3D
  26. classico pallone da calcio Modello 3D
  27. pallina da tennis Modello 3D
  28. basket misura 7 Modello 3D
  29. Basket-A0005 Modello 3D
  30. mazza da hockey Modello 3D
  31. Gine e il piccolo Goku Modello 3D
  32. palla di Natale Modello 3D
  33. pallone da calcio in schiuma Modello 3D
  34. oggetto magico 32 Modello 3D
  35. palla verde di Natale Modello 3D
  36. pallavolo 1 Modello 3D
  37. pallone da calcio 1 Modello 3D
  38. palla Modello 3D
  39. palla luminosa Modello 3D
  40. Palline giocattolo medievali Modello 3D
  41. palla libera - myach Modello 3D
  42. palla da bowling Modello 3D
  43. campane di Natale Modello 3D
  44. pallone da calcio Modello 3D
  45. pallavolo Modello 3D
  46. pallina da tennis Modello 3D
  47. Pane a fette Modello 3D
  48. hockey Modello 3D
  49. palla Modello 3D
  50. notte pianeta terra Modello 3D
  51. dodecagono Modello di stampa 3D
  52. mazza da baseball Modello 3D
  53. pallina da tennis Modello 3D
  54. giocattoli rotti Modello 3D
  55. treshina Modello 3D
  56. palla 2 Modello 3D
  57. il pallone da calcio Modello 3D
  58. palla a scatola Modello 3D
  59. palla di Natale Modello 3D
  60. pallina da golf Modello 3D
  61. pallina da tennis Modello 3D
Pagina 1 di 2

Q1: What types of 3D ball models are available on 3DExport?

Sports balls cover the obvious categories: soccer (football), basketball, tennis, baseball, volleyball, rugby, American football, golf ball. Beyond sports, you'll find stylized variants — glowing energy spheres, crystal balls, bouncy cartoon balls, pool/billiard balls, pinball machine balls. The distinction between a sports simulation ball and a game-ready prop matters: a physics-accurate soccer ball needs correct 32-panel geometry (12 pentagons, 20 hexagons on a traditional design) with proper UV mapping for realistic spin tracking; a cartoon ball just needs to look fun. For physical simulation in game engines, sphere primitive collision is almost always used regardless of the visual mesh, so visual complexity doesn't hurt performance.

Q2: What's the best 3D ball model for realistic physics simulation in games?

The mesh itself has almost no impact on physics simulation — Unreal Engine and Unity both use a sphere collider primitive for ball physics, regardless of visual mesh complexity. The visual model just needs to look correct. What matters for a realistic-feeling ball is the material setup: a soccer ball needs a PBR material with slightly rough, leather-like surface that catches directional light correctly; a billiard ball needs high specular, near-perfect gloss. The physical behavior is controlled entirely by the game engine's physics parameters — friction, restitution (bounciness), drag — not the geometry. A 500-polygon ball with correct materials plays identically to a 50,000-polygon one from a physics perspective.

Q3: Can 3D ball models be 3D printed?

Easily — a sphere is about as print-friendly as geometry gets, as long as it's a closed solid. Simple solid spheres print without supports if they're small enough for the bed. Hollow balls need wall thickness of at least 1.2mm for structural integrity on FDM printers. Textured balls — like a golf ball's dimple pattern — print well if the dimples are recessed into the surface rather than raised. Raised features under 0.4mm (the minimum extrusion width on most 0.4mm nozzle printers) won't print cleanly. For decorative display balls with complex surface patterns, resin printing (SLA/MSLA) captures much finer detail than FDM.

Q4: How do I animate a realistic ball bounce in Blender?

Use the graph editor to get the timing right — this is where most beginners fail. A ball drop from 2 meters should take about 0.6 seconds to hit the ground (real physics: √(2h/g) = √(0.4) ≈ 0.63s at 24fps). On contact, the ball squashes on a single frame — compress it to about 80% height and 120% width simultaneously to conserve volume. The bounce back should be slightly slower than the fall for a natural-feeling restitution below 1.0. Add a secondary rotation on the Z-axis that persists through multiple bounces — balls don't stop spinning immediately on contact. The rotation deceleration should lag behind the translational bounce decay by about 30%.