It seems that some 2D sketch dimensions are being automatically repositioned by Inventor very very far from the actual sketch. Inventor includes the positions of these dimensions in its calculation of it's what I'll call its view window (the stuff you want to see), so whenever I use the "zoom all" tool or the view cube the resulting view is very very zoomed out! I need to center my mouse on the origin and rotate the scroll wheel as much as 7 times to bring the part back to a reasonable size (approximately filling my window)!
Is it an Inventor bug that is causing these sketch dimensions to be repositioned so far from the sketch, or am I doing something weird to cause this? I couldn't have placed them there manually when I created the sketch.
After I hit "Zoom All":
After 7 turns of my scroll wheel to zoom in:
Can anyone provide any advice?
Thank you,
Vernon
Thank you for your response, but I know that I can drag the dimensions closer to the solid. This seems like an extra and needless step that I shouldn't have to take, since I didn't put the dimensions to these far-out positions in the first place. I am looking for the root cause and solution to the problem.
@Anonymous wrote:
I am looking for the root cause and solution to the problem.
I don't know if this will help - but I never project the origin planes - only the Origin Center Point.
Interesting. I am trying to filter myself so I don't ask a question with an obvious answer, but it's not coming to me; without projecting origin planes, how do you maintain parallelism or perpendicularity using only the origin center point? Do you offset work planes before sketching and then project them into your sketch?
@rdyson wrote:
... IV will not zoom out to the distant dimensions.
I thought the problem description was how to avoid Inventor throwing sketch dimensions way out into space?
@Anonymous wrote:
....without projecting origin planes, how do you maintain parallelism or perpendicularity using only the origin center point?
Inventor automatically places Horizontal, Perpendicular and Paralled constraints for me.
I don't need the projected planes.
I see. I had turned off all automatic constraints so that I intentionally choose all my constraints, but I see that it is cumulatively much more work to always manually add those constraints than to allow Inventor to do them automatically and then remove them on the few occasions I don't want them.
Thank you again JD.
@Anonymous wrote:
... the few occasions I don't want them.
Thank you again JD.
Hold down the Ctrl key when you don't want a constraint.