I am trying to create a part that has a spherical feature. The spherical feature is "sliced" on the front and back to create a flat surface (see Compound Rest Handle Isometric image). Should I use workplanes to slice the sphere? What is an efficient process the slice the sphere. See Compound Rest Handle Front and Compound Rest Handle Back images and compare to the final result in the Compound Rest Handle Isometric image), Thanks.
Handle Sketch (assuming making as one part rather than multi-body solid).
First Revolve (adding hole later).
Second Revolve.
Third Revolve (add rectangle to sketch and do this as two revolves - New Solid if needing multi-body for handle).
Mirror and add Hole through center.
Your attempt does not appear to be tangent.
Unless you modeled it as a multibody part you may find spliting the front gives you results you do not like at all, as the handles will split too. You may in that case have to use an extrude to cut the sphere flat where you need it.
JD's method would work well, but revolve the handle as a seperate body as you will have to add the pin and pin hole to the sketch, which also means the spheres that hold the handles on will also have a flat spot on them for contact surfaces.
Actually the handle spheres may not have a flat spot, on closer inspection of orgininal sketch it appears they just have a hole in them and the handle narrows down to the pin size, the only contact points the start of the pin and edge of hole tinto spheres.
Attach your file here for final check before you turn it in to your instructor.
Can't find what you're looking for? Ask the community or share your knowledge.