Sirius2
Mechanical
- Dec 15, 2002
- 67
Crimes, how do keep this one simple lol....
Right, I need to draw a spiral, a helix infact, much like a spring. I saw that Inventor has a 'coil' command, which I was counting on for doing this particular job (it doesnt get used much).
I start a sketch, draw a centerline, draw the coil diameter of 610mm, dimension the center of the circle to the centerline, exit sketch mode and choose 'coil'.
So far so good. The information I have at my disposal is the diameter of the coil centerline, and the hieght it needs to be, and that its one revolution, well, its actually slightly shorter, starting at an angle of 22 degrees (plan view) and finishing at 0 degrees. 0.911 revolutions I think.
However, I dont want 'flat ends' becuase it detrements the shape of the coil from helix by squashing it out of proportion at the bottom and top *in regards to the info I have* - YET, if I leave it alone with no flat ends, it sweeps the sketched circle up the helix - but the cross section of the coil isnt cylindrical (as the sketch is not perpendicular to the axis of the helix I defined in the coil dialog box).
I cannot use the flat ends option (which does *then* give me a true circular section all the way up) cos of the shape distortion and Im not astute enough to know how to construct a skeltal wireframe coil/helix and create a workplane without using the coil command.
I tried fooling the program by creating an extremely small 'flat' run off angle, but it doesnt compute it without being too large a flat/blend for the real world job.
.
I tried it in MDT, and after reading the helix tutorial it actually creates a path and a workplane perpendicular to your information (hieght and revolution) where you *then* seperately proceed to sketch your 2d swept profile and sweep it- unlike inventor. The MDT plane always remains perp to the coil even when you edit it.
The trouble is that when you create views of helix's in MDT, you do NOT get a smooth representation of the coil, its rather hexagonalised (not viewres or facetres related) and therefore it looks utterly awful to the customer and even disjointed for the most part. Its unacceptable.
The Inventor tests Ive been doing come out better, but I cannot achieve the same thing as I drew in MDT, and exporting the MDT file into IV doesnt give me good results in Inventor - and besides, I need to be able to edit the helix incase of changes to the plans further down the project.
How do I draw this 'coil' in Inventor, given the hieght and revolution info, and maintain natural ends running off 'square' to the helix path and give a true cylindrical conformity all the way up the spiral, and not create an elliptical one as my initial sketch is not perpendicular to the helix angle?.
I cant create a workplane to what is currently anonymous information regarding the helix angle, as I only know hieght and revolution, so if I need to change the helix, the theory based initial angle will be wrong in context to the changes - and therefore again yield an irregular cross section. It needs to be planar/perp to the coil axis, terminating on the ht and rev info given.
Sorry if thats confusing, Its hard to explain. Hope you can clear this up for me!
Many thanks
Sirius2
Right, I need to draw a spiral, a helix infact, much like a spring. I saw that Inventor has a 'coil' command, which I was counting on for doing this particular job (it doesnt get used much).
I start a sketch, draw a centerline, draw the coil diameter of 610mm, dimension the center of the circle to the centerline, exit sketch mode and choose 'coil'.
So far so good. The information I have at my disposal is the diameter of the coil centerline, and the hieght it needs to be, and that its one revolution, well, its actually slightly shorter, starting at an angle of 22 degrees (plan view) and finishing at 0 degrees. 0.911 revolutions I think.
However, I dont want 'flat ends' becuase it detrements the shape of the coil from helix by squashing it out of proportion at the bottom and top *in regards to the info I have* - YET, if I leave it alone with no flat ends, it sweeps the sketched circle up the helix - but the cross section of the coil isnt cylindrical (as the sketch is not perpendicular to the axis of the helix I defined in the coil dialog box).
I cannot use the flat ends option (which does *then* give me a true circular section all the way up) cos of the shape distortion and Im not astute enough to know how to construct a skeltal wireframe coil/helix and create a workplane without using the coil command.
I tried fooling the program by creating an extremely small 'flat' run off angle, but it doesnt compute it without being too large a flat/blend for the real world job.
I tried it in MDT, and after reading the helix tutorial it actually creates a path and a workplane perpendicular to your information (hieght and revolution) where you *then* seperately proceed to sketch your 2d swept profile and sweep it- unlike inventor. The MDT plane always remains perp to the coil even when you edit it.
The trouble is that when you create views of helix's in MDT, you do NOT get a smooth representation of the coil, its rather hexagonalised (not viewres or facetres related) and therefore it looks utterly awful to the customer and even disjointed for the most part. Its unacceptable.
The Inventor tests Ive been doing come out better, but I cannot achieve the same thing as I drew in MDT, and exporting the MDT file into IV doesnt give me good results in Inventor - and besides, I need to be able to edit the helix incase of changes to the plans further down the project.
How do I draw this 'coil' in Inventor, given the hieght and revolution info, and maintain natural ends running off 'square' to the helix path and give a true cylindrical conformity all the way up the spiral, and not create an elliptical one as my initial sketch is not perpendicular to the helix angle?.
I cant create a workplane to what is currently anonymous information regarding the helix angle, as I only know hieght and revolution, so if I need to change the helix, the theory based initial angle will be wrong in context to the changes - and therefore again yield an irregular cross section. It needs to be planar/perp to the coil axis, terminating on the ht and rev info given.
Sorry if thats confusing, Its hard to explain. Hope you can clear this up for me!
Many thanks
Sirius2