Anuncios

The Autodesk Community Forums has a new look. Read more about what's changed on the Community Announcements board.

Help needed for making a drawing

jaskiratspanesar
Enthusiast

Help needed for making a drawing

jaskiratspanesar
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

The image of drawing is attached below.

 

I'm trying to make this engineering drawing but I am not able to make the left side of top view of the drawing.

To me, it seems like some dimensions are missing to draw arcs.

Could someone try to make it and share a video tutorial?

Thanks a lot.

0 Me gusta
Responder
967 Vistas
10 Respuestas
Respuestas (10)

parkr4st
Advisor
Advisor

Layout the guideline geometry from the given dimensions and draw the final lines.  All the information is in the sketch.

 

some math: R38 + R24 = R62 for the center of the 50 degree arc.

R13 is fillet of the two straight lines

 

0 Me gusta

jaskiratspanesar
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

please check the screenshot below, the angle which I highlighted should be of 50 degrees.

And i have also shared my own drawing, could you explain how you plotted 2nd arc

Thanks

0 Me gusta

jaskiratspanesar
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

I have made it this far.

 

I still can not understand that math. could you please elaborate

0 Me gusta

Patchy
Mentor
Mentor

No need to do the math, draw it.

The yellow arc.JPG

0 Me gusta

jaskiratspanesar
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
I want to draw the 3rd arc.
0 Me gusta

Patchy
Mentor
Mentor

Trim the circle, you'll get that arc.

0 Me gusta

j.palmeL29YX
Mentor
Mentor

@jaskiratspanesar wrote:

 

To me, it seems like some dimensions are missing to draw arcs.

 


 

The opposite is the case: If we assume on the left site all arcs/lines touch tangetially, then one of the dimesnions (e.g. the 50° angle) leads to an overdimensioned/overconstrained geometry. 

Attached an example which was drawn using constraints. I "ignored"  the 50° angle and got an full constrained geometry. 

I you move the inserted image 200 to the right you can compare you image shape with the AutoCAD geometry. To reduce the discrepancies between both I changed the 96 dimension t0 95. 

You can play with this file until you get the needed result, as example: 

- change the 95 back to the initial 96 (double click at d6 and change the value) and see what happens

- add the 50° angle if you urgently need that value (you must delete one of the tangential constraints before) and see what happens.  

- Play with changing other dimensions and or geometrical constraints. We (I) can not know how the shape should look at the end. 

 

 

 

Jürgen Palme
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.

EESignature

parkr4st
Advisor
Advisor

Thanks to the others it looks like you have a solution.  I didn't catch the 50 degrees earlier as I had to get to work.

But the question I have now is if that is top and front view, why is the front view wider than the top view?

 

0 Me gusta

j.palmeL29YX
Mentor
Mentor

@parkr4st wrote:

... if that is top and front view, 

 


the two views obviously do not show the same part

Jürgen Palme
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.

EESignature

0 Me gusta

jaskiratspanesar
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Yeah, you are right. The front view is wider, which is obviously wrong. I think someone mistakenly stretched it as number or projections are correct
0 Me gusta