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Copy/Extract Entire Edge of a Surface

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jzecha

Aerospace
Joined
Jan 20, 2016
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236
Location
US
I come from a Catia background and wanted to know if there is a function that allows me to copy/extract the entire edge of a joined surface?

I know you can copy an edge of a surface and use the Rule based features to pull a tangent, but this is not the entire perimeter of my surface.

In catia the function is called Boundary and and i just select one edge and it propagates around the entire perimeter.
 
Look for "seed and bound". I'd be more specific, but never had need to use it.
 
Seed and Boundry only works for surfaces as far as I understand.
I use it quite often for surfaces at least.

I need to create a curve from the edge of a surface.
 
That is basically what I figured it was, but it fails when i do that procedure.
I always just cycled through that list with right clicks.

Any other ideas when the Boundry function fails?
 
Fails? Like pre-highlights/selects nothing?
Always tough to debug blind.

Like: Is this imported surfaces?
 
Fails like when i select the Boundary function from the menu it highlights exactly what i want, but when I try to copy it, it just defaults to the original segment.
It also shows me a longer segment when right clicking through my option, but when i click to select it, it goes away.

My best guess is that its a broken segment due to trash surfaces.
I have found Catia usually handles these better than Creo.

Yes, it's an imported part surface that I Seed and Boundary selected to create my mold surface.
 
It's probably why I never ran into problems like that - avoiding imports is key to a happy life. PTC makes vertically integrated products that aren't well suited to cleaning up other CAD system's problems. There are other CAD systems that do that better. CATIA was created when all there was was problem surfaces, so it's no doubt they inherited that, but PTC, well, it's Parametric, not fix-it, and they are in the problem avoidance business.

I'd recommend contacting Bart Brejcha at design-engine.com for some training if you get stuck. This is the sort of thing he deals with all the time.
 
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