Community
Inventor Forum
Welcome to Autodesk’s Inventor Forums. Share your knowledge, ask questions, and explore popular Inventor topics.
cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Bend 90 degrees - L=A+B-x

6 REPLIES 6
Reply
Message 1 of 7
michael.shelley
4045 Views, 6 Replies

Bend 90 degrees - L=A+B-x

Guys,

 

Can somebody please confirm I am not an Idiot?

 

We have bought a new copper machine and the company we bought it from has supplied bend tables for the machine which they same is extremly accurate.

 

so for example - If I have A=100mm B=100mm and correction value .7mm for a 90 degree bend on a 10mm thick piece of copper. I sould get 199,3mm flat length.

 

AM I missing something here? Because machine is saying flat length is longer than this.

 

Really appreciate some help on this.

 

Michael

6 REPLIES 6
Message 2 of 7
mrattray
in reply to: michael.shelley

Inventor's bend allowance system is a one-size-fits-all. If you need to get accurate flat patterns from Inventor then you need to configue it properly. You'll need to copy the bend table that came with your machine into an Inventor bend table and use that as your unfold rule.

 

By the way, I'm not sure about copper, but most materials shrink when you bend them. This means you would need to be adding the correction factor rather than subtracting it. It's not unheard of for some materials to grow, though, and I work with steel not copper.

Mike (not Matt) Rattray

Message 3 of 7
jletcher
in reply to: mrattray

mrattray,

 

 I have been in sheet metal for over 25 years not sure where you get sheet metal shrinks.

 

There is a bend deduction and bend allowance.

 

Bend deduction is use when bending. Material stretches

 

Bend Allowance is used for forming. Material is drawn.

 

Does not matter the material if I bend a 90 degree bend to get the right length I add the flange lengths and deduct the stretch when bending.

 

If I am forming a rib it draws the material so I would take the finish size with the rib and add material to allow for the shrinkage.

Message 4 of 7
mrattray
in reply to: jletcher

James,

I get metal shrinking from the fact that when we take a piece of steel and brake it 90 degrees it shrinks. I think it may have to do with the sharp dies we use here. I made up a bend table based on our equipment shortly after I started working here. For example if we put a 90 degree bend in a 10GA sheet of HRS using a 1/8" radius die we measure a material loss of .030". 16GA aluminum shrinks by .030" with a .040" radius die. The only time we recorded stretching was with stainless steel plates. 1/4" stainless plates grew .038" in a 1/8" die.

 

Mike (not Matt) Rattray

Message 5 of 7
jletcher
in reply to: mrattray

mrattray,

  Are you ID not OD? When you measure a flange? This could be why, all material will stretch when bending has to or you could not bend it.

 

Now if you dimension ID then this is way you think it don't...

 

I never go off of ID to many issues with ID because of the stretching of the material. Much harder to hold tolerance also..

 

I hold a .005 tolerance.

 

Few shops I have as clients went of ID but always had issues with tolerance once I converted them to OD they was amazed at the difference it made...

Message 6 of 7
mrattray
in reply to: jletcher

Ah, that makes sense. We are ID, but we hold to a +/- .030" tolerance. Our fab guys consider high precision to be switching from measuring tape to a scale.

Mike (not Matt) Rattray

Message 7 of 7
jletcher
in reply to: mrattray

Wow just seen I put way instead of why... It's Friday..

 

OK. I thought so I am at a shop now that does that and I am trying to convert them to O.D.

Can't find what you're looking for? Ask the community or share your knowledge.

Post to forums  

Autodesk Design & Make Report