Hi!
This post is continuation of
I have the same issue agian.
I need to create extruded circle in the center of solid.
When I do presspull or extrude I can see result in 2D wireframe,
but I can't see that in others types of View
I aligned UCS before extrude solid.
After extruding Solid - the body of guitar,
I am trying to use and presspull.
It still doesn't work.
All ideas are appreciated.
The file is attached
Thank you!
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by dbroad. Go to Solution.
Thanks for the kudos. In the second attached drawing, those are not circles. Those are circular surfaces. There is a difference. They seem to work fine in the second drawing though.
Create a screencast for your process, starting with 2d geometry for the guitar and post it.
these are not surfaces.
this is circle having thickness of 0.05.
+++++++
Please advise me on program for screencast
yes, I posted the 3 objects in order to show you the steps
1)I create box
2)I draw circle
3)I do presspull
it works as it should do
Direct your browser to screencast.autodesk.com
Focus on the guitar problems, not on the second drawing, which seems to work for you.
Thank you for your simple explanation!
I used this tutorial and it is much more complicated!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uf2-bP4S_XE
Thanks again!
It happens to me as well every time I try to extrude an polyline with, say, a separate circle in the middle. I do this for welded base plates where I need threaded holes for that base plate. And it doesnt work. It works in wireframe, the two separate object moves together and the extrusion is created with the same command at the same time but when I change to realistic or any other view type the hole only shows as a separate object inside the polyline and not as a void. So if its not precious AutoCad's fault then who's? And this has been like this since 2009. I wonder when they're going to get around to fix this bug ... and trimming hatching and insulating objects in block editors without the program crashing.... etc.
A good workman is not obsessed with a faulty tool. He replaces it with one that works. Its otherwise called sentimentalism.
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