CNSZU
Mechanical
- Sep 2, 2005
- 318
I've been looking at Class-A surfacing techniques used by Alias Automotive and trying to use NX to accomplish the same tasks. Since Class-A modeling is essentially controlling the pole structure of 3D surfaces, the principles should be exactly the same regardless of software.
One obstacle I've come across in NX is the ability to move poles in a symmetrical fashion. See the attached image for what I'm trying to do. (The reason why it's done this way rather than modeling one side, then mirroring, is to end up with a smooth curvature across the center plane.) With X-form I want to move some poles (move by polygon, proportional) on one side, and have the poles on the other side move symmetrically with the center plane as reference. However, I cannot find a way to achieve this. Is this functionality not yet implemented in X-form, or does NX have other tools to achieve this?
NX9 Win8.1 64bit i7-3770K 16GB Quadro2000
One obstacle I've come across in NX is the ability to move poles in a symmetrical fashion. See the attached image for what I'm trying to do. (The reason why it's done this way rather than modeling one side, then mirroring, is to end up with a smooth curvature across the center plane.) With X-form I want to move some poles (move by polygon, proportional) on one side, and have the poles on the other side move symmetrically with the center plane as reference. However, I cannot find a way to achieve this. Is this functionality not yet implemented in X-form, or does NX have other tools to achieve this?
NX9 Win8.1 64bit i7-3770K 16GB Quadro2000