Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations waross on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

SolidEdge Can: Will SolidWorks do this????? 3

Status
Not open for further replies.

Baroche

Civil/Environmental
Nov 28, 2006
13
Hello All

Please I am converting to SW from SE. How can I create this type of cutout in a SW sheetmetal part-(Notice the bent flange around the cutout).
Here:



SolidEdge uses one command "Drawn Hole" under the "Dimple" feature in the Sheet metal environment.

Please what is the SW equivalent?

Thanks for any assistance

BTW: is it possible to get Solidworks to dimension the distance between two parallel planes. Can't seem to place this dimension. Could not place the dimension in a sketch and not in 3D sketch - What gives???
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

If you are using SolidWorks 2007 you can use the sheet metal Edge-Flange command. This is new functionality that was added in SW07 to be able to add an edge flange to a curved edge. You may have to play with the settings and/or the edges you select a bit to get what you are looking for.

If in an earlier version of SolidWorks you will have to add non-sheet metal features to create the flange. You will also not be able to flatten the part.


Regards,

Anna Wood
SW06 SP5 x64, WinXP x64
Dell Precision 380, Pentium D940, 4 Gigs RAM, FX3450
WD Raptors, 1 Gb network connection
 
Nice one Anna, completely forgot about that tool. Is the flat pattern accurate, or do you to have fudge it a little? SW can do flat patterns of straight flanges perfectly, but square-to-round flat patterns can't be used without creative thinking.

SW07 SP2.0

Flores
 
BTW: is it possible to get Solidworks to dimension the distance between two parallel planes. Can't seem to place this dimension. Could not place the dimension in a sketch and not in 3D sketch - What gives???
Are you wanting to do this in a model or a drawing?

If in a model ... Why? Offsetting a plane creates a behind-the-scenes dimension which can be accessed by double-clicking or editing the plane feature in the FM tree.

However if you really need to, don't create a separate sketch, just add a dimension from the Annotations or Dimensions toolbar by selecting the two planes in the graphics area ... for both model or drawing. Take note though that this will be a reference (driven) dimension, NOT a driving dimension .

[cheers]
 
Thank you all for all your help. You guys are the best!

Regards

Michael
 
No, the flat pattern is not correct. It does not account for the compression and stretching you will get going around the curves.

Still need a higher end add-on like BlankWorks for that kind of blank development.

It will get you a starting point, then you can add or subtract material with additional features to get your final blank.

Regards,

Anna Wood
SW06 SP5 x64, WinXP x64
Dell Precision 380, Pentium D940, 4 Gigs RAM, FX3450
WD Raptors, 1 Gb network connection
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor