I have a logo that I created in Inkscape. I wanted to import it as a sketch into a part I'm making in Inventor, so I brought the SVG into Illustrator and exported it as a DWG. When I go to bring the DWG into my part as a sketch, the preview is blank, and nothing gets imported. I'm attaching the DWG file. I tried attaching the SVG file as well, but apparently, that's not a valid etension for an attachment, so I added a .TXT suffix. What am I doing wrong? TIA.
I've opened the .DWG with both Inventor and TrueView (I don't actually have AutoCAD installed on this machine). In both cases the file appeared to be empty. There may or may not be anything even in the file? It's only 6k ...
Rusty
I don't see anything in the file. It appears blank.
Niels van der Veer
Inventor professional user & 3DS Max enthusiast
Vault professional user/manager
The Netherlands
Well, i managed to get it all exported to dwg.
Hope this works for you. 😉
Niels van der Veer
Inventor professional user & 3DS Max enthusiast
Vault professional user/manager
The Netherlands
I tried importing the whole DWG into an Inventor sketch before, but I think, it's too complicated.
Here's another version. If thickness change for the characters is needed, an easy way is shown at the end of the file for the N character. EOP needs to be moved down, as always.
Walter
Walter Holzwarth
Not sure what you think is complicated, guess it's more likely something with the import setting.
I only constrain endpoints, not applying geometric constraints.
Logo's are often too "curvy" for inventor.
Niels van der Veer
Inventor professional user & 3DS Max enthusiast
Vault professional user/manager
The Netherlands
Niels van der Veer
Inventor professional user & 3DS Max enthusiast
Vault professional user/manager
The Netherlands
Here's your/the logo in both JPG and BMP format try again using it from one of these, both look OK in Paintshop Pro both measured approximately 180mmx35mm
I hope they've attached as IE11 seem somewhat temperamental with attachments.
I've imported the SVG into CorelDraw, set line thickness to zero before saving as DWG. You can see the difference for the N at the upper left. And you see the same thickness for the IPT.
So, if more line thickness for the fonts is needed, this can be done by an outside shell operation. It's faster done than a Thicken by selecting all surrounding faces, and it seems more stable. I've got a crash the other way.
Walter
Walter Holzwarth