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Loft Problem


Laurel

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Hi.

 

I'm having a bit of a problem creating a lofted feature. Please find attached the .ipt file in question.

 

You will see a representation of a spool of tape following a path. You will notice a lofted feature which is supposed to show the tape twisting from one plane, through 90 degrees to another plane (think of it as twisting a roll of tissue paper as it is unrolled).

 

As you can see (I hope), I can't get the tape to maintain its cross-section through-out the loft. I thought of using rails, but am not aware of a method of accurately drawing those in this case. I'd need to resort to guesswork.

 

Any help would be very appreciated. Thanks.

Tape.zip

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Ok, I've managed to make what I think is an ok job of the loft in question - please see the attached .ipt file.

 

I created 4 3D Sketches and on each, drew a 3D spline which corresponded to a particular corner of the 2D sketches which would form the loft. These splines were then used as rails for the loft.

 

I drew each spline starting from the edges which would form the ends of the loft, but doing this meant that the ends of the splines didn't flow smoothly in the directions I needed. To resolve this, I placed a tangential constraint between the spline and an appropriate edge at one end, and a similar constraint at the other between the spline and a 3D line I drew in the required direction.

 

I have a couple of concerns about how I 'solved' this problem:

 

1) Is it accurate?

2) Is there a better and more accepted way to do it?

3) I've never used 3D splines before, and those on this part are not fully constrained as I couldn't work out how to do so (a fixed constraint didn't seem to work). How do I resolve this?

 

If anyone could offer any opinions, I'd be grateful.

Tape Ver 2.zip

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my version of inventor is older so i cant open your files. Here is something i would probably do.

 

what i did was draw a start/end rectangle to represent your paper cross section. It could just be a line if you were making a surface. I then drew a circle centered on one of the rectangles with the OD snapped to one of its endpoints. I then extruded this circle as a surface.

 

In a 3d sketch i drew a straight line from one edge of the closest rectangle to the corresponding edge point on the far rectangle. Then i used project curve onto surface and used my cylinder to project it to.

 

then i used sweep choosing one rectangle to sweep, my straight line between the two as my path and the projected curve as a guide rail.

loftpaper.JPG

loftpaper2.JPG

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I should also mention. if you can avoid using spline curves you will get a more accurate outcome for something like this. Also loft allows the object to transform between sketches. sweep wont allow this(besides a taper). Something like this where the tape(assuming it isnt pulled/stretched) is going to keep the same cross section through the transition would be better modeled with a sweep.

loftpaper3.JPG

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That looks like a better way of doing it. The concern you raise about the loft method is exactly what I was thinking. I'll try your method. Thanks very much Shifty.

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Shifty (hope you don't mind me calling you that :)) - I'm trying to perform the sweep as you described. It's easy to follow, and I understand it completely.

 

Attached is a picture of my attempt. The dimensioned sketches at either end of the swept cylinder are the paper cross-sections.

 

The example you described uses an extruded circle to make the cylinder. I swept mine along a spline which stretches from one cross-section to the other. This is because in my example, the cross-sections are not along the same axis. The spline can be seen in green, and is tangentially constrained to two straight lines (in black) at either end of the spline which ensures the path of the spline flows smoothly from each of the cross-sections.

 

The straight line between corners is shown in black, and the projection in purple.

 

When I try to sweep the cross-section along the spline using the path and guide-rail method, i get a 'modeling failure in ASM' error.

 

Any idea where I am going wrong?

Tape 2.jpg

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Back again!!

 

I don't know what the problem was exactly, but I managed to sort it.

 

I did a little cleaning up - redrew the corner to corner line, deleted the tangent lines at the end of the spline path, recreated the surface cylinder and reprojected the projected line - and the sweep worked as required.

 

Attached is a picture of the final result.

 

Thanks very much for the help with a slightly complicated problem. I'm learning all the time with your help. :)

Tape 2B.jpg

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paul it probably has to do with the fact that your cross sections are non planar. will it sweep just the straight path with no guide rail?

 

the method i described probably wont work if the two end sketches are non planar.

 

what you can do in this case is add another 3d sketch(or edit the one with your projected curve) and add another curve defining the "guide" for the other side as well. Then use the loft command. Becuase your guides are essentially constrained to that cylinder you should get no distortion of the loft.

 

 

edit, i see you replied as i was. glad you got it sorted:)

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