A_class surface means - it is not just seen surface and unseen
surface
In normal no technical words, A_class surface means
It is smooth looking reflective surface with no distortion of light
highlites, which moves in a smooth uniform designer intended
formations.
when you create - car body panel, due to their complex shapes
it not possible to create the surface with one single face /patch
so you make multiple face/patch
( surface is a group of face/patch added together.)
when these things are added, at the boundary of joining you need to have connectivity and continuation of minimum
order two.
for example
In case one, at the connecting boundary of two patches you have common boundary but it is sharp corner. this
does not qualify as A_class surface.
In case two - at the connecting boundary of two patches have common boundary and no sharp corner - but you
have tangent
continuity, this also does not qualify as A_class surface.
In case two - at the connecting boundary of two patches have common boundary and no sharp corner - you
have tangent
continuity and curveture continuity this does qualify as A_class surface.
( ps: sine curve is good example for curveture continuity. but you can not call it a A_class surface )
reason is very simple the real requirement of asthetic and good looking and designer intended shape is not there.
As for as different S/W showing the cuveture continuity in the surfaces. it works like this
If you create a normal to the tangent line on a point which is lying on a common boundary of both patch or face, the variation in the curvature value between the two normal,should not be more than the threshold value which is set as preference value by the S/W
( Normal is nothing but the curveture value of the face /curve at
that point )
as for as S/W are concerned
Yes ICEM and Imageware can help you create surface
with cuvature continuity, but It is you, who are going to make
A_class .
Dassaults Systems has one S/W which was previously owned
by MATRA and Cisigraph called "Styler " ( old name was STRIM) , which is supposed to be one of the oldest and very good S/W's for reconstructing the surface from digitised data.
Good Luck
Suren