As you're about to probably find out, I'm new to Inventor as a tool, so I'm getting to grips with it.
I'm creating a supercharger fan, and I need to have the fan blades at an angle. Currenly, they're extruded from the base at 90 degrees, I would want them at about 60. (in relation to the base plate, that is.) I had assumed that, like some other 3D programs I've used, I could simply rotate the base, causing the blades to all lean to one side, though as Inventor doesn't actually work with polygons (Vector, right?) I know I can't do this.
So, long story short, is there a way I can get the fan blades to be at a 60 degree angle without starting the whole thing again? I've added the file, please excuse the untidyness of the actions applied to it. Like I said; I'm new.
If there's a resource I can use to answer these kinds of questions in the future, lemme know.
Thanks;
Tom Rutson
I don't fully understand your design intent, but see if this gives you any ideas.
When JD comes along, he's going to tell you, you'r doing way too much work.
He may also complain about your sketch1 needing ~275 dim's to be fully constrained.
Tom,
I'm certainly not in the turbine industry, but first thing I would do, especially if you're new to Inventor is to simply your sketches and features. Modeling like that would be asking for serious trouble, intense heart burn and possibly even suicide if prolonged. I'm a firm believer of the K.I.S.S. principle.
Extrude your "base".
Create a new seperate sketch for your blade "profile".
Further define gemoetry of blade profiles with additional features (lofts, chamfers, fillets, etc).
Pattern those combined features of the blade profile however many times need be.
Attached is a VERY crude example of modeling that way. Keep in mind the only thing I'm trying to show if a much cleaner means of modeling.
That way when you do need to edit an angle of a single dimension, that you don't have to do that a million times on your overly busy single sketch. I also do not use pattern in sketch mode as it's less forgiving than patterning Features. YMMV.
I would take a look into the Inventor Essential tutorials, learn what design intent is and get some proper training with your reseller team.
Best of Luck!
EDIT - Just saw the post above mine. 🙂
I recommend you put this part aside for a while (you will have to do it over - right from the beginning).
Go through this http://home.pct.edu/~jmather/SkillsUSA%20University.pdf
then
Help>Learning Tools>Tutorials and Skill Builders
then
http://inventortrenches.blogspot.com/p/inventor-tutorials.html
You will probably need to get into some surface modeling
http://home.pct.edu/~jmather/content/DSG322/inventor_surface_tutorials.htm
Pattern features - not sketch entities (in most cases).
Looks like some thickened trimmed surfaces should produce a nice part (and much easier).