@Christoph_360 wrote:
Hello
Thank you for your understanding of the concerns of the CAM site.
I was very surprised by the statement "Fillets should not be part of sketches, but should be applied as features.", because it is precisely with the sketch that sophisticated turning geometries can be easily mapped.
Thanks again
Mfg
Christoph
For complex turned parts, I can see the benefits for putting "everything" into one sketch. For any other CAD and manufacturing disciplines, generally fillets indeed do not belong into a sketch but are to be applied as solid modeling features, prefereably mostly towards the end of the feature tree/design history/timeline. . There are some instances where you have to put fillets into a sketch, for example when you are designing piping, or sweep paths.
Keeping most fillets out of sketches is is a best practice in any of the CAD systems I've worked with.
It has a number of advantages.
1. Sketches are simpler and that makes debugging a sketch much easier and often no debugging is needed.
2. That makes sketching much faster and more productive.
3. In a parametric CAD software the sketch engine has to continually "loop over" sketches and evaluate them for changes. 3D features use less computational resources and that makes for a faster model.