>>5281630So before I knew the joints were standard I pulled them out of the figure and took a whole bunch of measurements off them with a digital caliper. Every measurements that I could take I recorded but the important ones were the diameter of the ball and peg and the length of the peg. I also measured the inside of the peg hole in the foot as best as I could but I was not sure how accurate measurement I got. Taking the peg and ball measurement I compared those to the hole measurement and figured the clearance between the parts was about 0.2 to 0.3mm which was about in line with what research told me was a viable part clearance. From there I took my shoe mesh which was made in separate software, not scaled correctly and did not have any peg holes and imported it in to a free CAD package. I made a dummy box (seen in pic between shoes) that had the same dimensions as Shamrock's original foot and used that to guess what a good size to scale the shoes to. I then took a ball and cylinder and made them the same size as the real ball joint plus 0.3mm. (The pointy ball-ish things in the pic are the ball and cylinder plus some modification to smooth things out) From there I could subtract the stand-in ball joint from the volume of the mesh to carve a hole in it that would fit the real ball joint.
Sorry if anything I said was unclear, let me know if you have any question.