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    Reply
    *Hoder, Dave

    Miter Folds

    123 Views, 15 Replies
    02-12-2003 06:05 AM
    Has anyone figured out how to do a miter fold yet? If you don't know what
    that is, picture this:
    Take a strip of material say 4"x48"x1/2", chamfer the 2 short ends @ 45 deg,
    cut 3 45deg v-grooves at equal spacing & leave .030" material at the bottom
    of the groove. Now fold the machined part into a rectangle. Maybe one of you
    sheet metal gurus can help me here.
    Thanx, Dave
    Please use plain text.
    *Keller, Kent

    Re: Miter Folds

    02-12-2003 06:48 AM in reply to: *Hoder, Dave
    I would think it could be modeled without to much hair pulling, but I doubt you will be
    able to unfold it.

    --
    Kent
    Member of the Autodesk Discussion Forum Moderator Program


    "Dave Hoder" wrote in message
    news:963038B2A0AF04CE775DF5DE9F07DA28@in.WebX.maYIadrTaRb...
    > Has anyone figured out how to do a miter fold yet? If you don't know what
    > that is, picture this:
    > Take a strip of material say 4"x48"x1/2", chamfer the 2 short ends @ 45 deg,
    > cut 3 45deg v-grooves at equal spacing & leave .030" material at the bottom
    > of the groove. Now fold the machined part into a rectangle. Maybe one of you
    > sheet metal gurus can help me here.
    > Thanx, Dave
    >
    >
    Please use plain text.
    *Hoder, Dave

    Re:

    02-12-2003 07:37 AM in reply to: *Hoder, Dave
    I need to show it as one part (with the original part size) in the BOM &
    unfold it for machining. Right now I'm faking it by making a drived part
    from a dummy unfolded assy & hiding the separate parts in the Parts List.
    This won't be a good idea though as soon as we start pulling data directly
    from assemblies. Any ideas?
    Please use plain text.
    *Bliss, Charles

    Re: Miter Folds

    02-12-2003 11:46 AM in reply to: *Hoder, Dave
    Create flanges using the offset option. make the offset longer then the
    flange width. This will leave large gaps between your flanges. Use the
    corner tool to close the flanges. This will give you a mitered corner.
    I have placed an example in Customer Files.




    Dave Hoder wrote:

    >Has anyone figured out how to do a miter fold yet? If you don't know what
    >that is, picture this:
    >Take a strip of material say 4"x48"x1/2", chamfer the 2 short ends @ 45 deg,
    >cut 3 45deg v-grooves at equal spacing & leave .030" material at the bottom
    >of the groove. Now fold the machined part into a rectangle. Maybe one of you
    >sheet metal gurus can help me here.
    >Thanx, Dave
    >
    >
    >
    >
    Please use plain text.
    *Keller, Kent

    Re:

    02-12-2003 01:12 PM in reply to: *Hoder, Dave
    I could easily be wrong, but I don't think that is what he is after. The
    words 45deg v-groves and Machined parts makes me think he wants a weakening
    grove to make the fold with.

    --
    Kent Keller
    Member of the Autodesk Discussion Forum Moderator Program

    http://www.MyMcad.com/KWiK/Mcad.htm

    "Charles Bliss" wrote in message
    news:3E4B1502.5000604@cbliss.com...

    > Create flanges using the offset option.
    >
    >
    > Dave Hoder wrote:
    :
    > >Take a strip of material say 4"x48"x1/2", chamfer the 2 short ends @ 45
    deg,
    > >cut 3 45deg v-grooves at equal spacing & leave .030" material at the
    bottom
    > >of the groove. Now fold the machined part
    Please use plain text.
    *Hendey, Matt

    Re: Miter Folds

    02-12-2003 08:38 PM in reply to: *Hoder, Dave
    Can you post what you have in CF?

    Matt
    Please use plain text.
    *Keller, Kent

    Re:

    02-13-2003 01:11 AM in reply to: *Hoder, Dave
    Matt

    If you are talking to Charles... He did! 8^)

    --
    Kent
    Member of the Autodesk Discussion Forum Moderator Program


    "Matt Hendey" wrote in message
    news:f1431d6.4@WebX.maYIadrTaRb...
    > Can you post what you have in CF?
    >
    > Matt
    >
    >
    >
    Please use plain text.
    *Hendey, Matt

    Re:

    02-13-2003 03:10 AM in reply to: *Hoder, Dave
    No to Dave, Sorry. I'm interested in what he is trying to do. I tried
    creating the part from the description he gave but if I got it right, I
    can't see the reason for building a part that way. No that there isn't one.

    Matt

    "Kent Keller" wrote in message
    news:1B117C461A3FF93F56B7ACC5468940BB@in.WebX.maYIadrTaRb...
    > Matt
    >
    > If you are talking to Charles... He did! 8^)
    >
    > --
    > Kent
    > Member of the Autodesk Discussion Forum Moderator Program
    >
    >
    > "Matt Hendey" wrote in message
    > news:f1431d6.4@WebX.maYIadrTaRb...
    > > Can you post what you have in CF?
    > >
    > > Matt
    > >
    > >
    > >
    >
    >
    Please use plain text.
    *Hoder, Dave

    Re:

    02-14-2003 12:46 AM in reply to: *Hoder, Dave
    The part is in CF called Miter Fold. (I just made an example shape, not a
    sheet metal part) This is a common manufacturing process in the furniture /
    woodworking industry where we are working with a piece of wood covered with
    a colored paper. We cut thru the wood & leave the paper, then fold the whole
    thing together. This makes for a cleaner seam & less assemby time.
    Thanks for having a look.
    Please use plain text.
    *Caldwell, Larry

    Re:

    02-14-2003 12:53 AM in reply to: *Hoder, Dave
    I did one of those by ... cheating? ... making a face that would bend then
    add the rest in an assembly because it needed to be shown both flat and
    folded.
    ~Larry

    "Dave Hoder" wrote in message
    news:F82FB0D513739B07DFE1A95A4327C751@in.WebX.maYIadrTaRb...
    > The part is in CF called Miter Fold. (I just made an example shape, not a
    > sheet metal part) This is a common manufacturing process in the furniture
    /
    > woodworking industry where we are working with a piece of wood covered
    with
    > a colored paper. We cut thru the wood & leave the paper, then fold the
    whole
    > thing together. This makes for a cleaner seam & less assemby time.
    > Thanks for having a look.
    >
    >
    Please use plain text.