- Marcar como nuevo
- Favorito
- Suscribir
- Silenciar
- Suscribirse a un feed RSS
- Resaltar
- Imprimir
- Denunciar
Hi folks, probably a very basic command here, but how do I measure a valley angle on a chute? See photo attachment.
john.vellek has embedded your image(s) for clarity
¡Resuelto! Ir a solución.
- Marcar como nuevo
- Favorito
- Suscribir
- Silenciar
- Suscribirse a un feed RSS
- Resaltar
- Imprimir
- Denunciar
hI @Slawek_Bielawa,
I am sure there must be a better method but I simply go to paperspace and throw a DIMANG on the "flat" view.
Please select the Accept as Solution button if my post solves your issue or answers your question.
John Vellek
Join the Autodesk Customer Council - Interact with developers, provide feedback on current and future software releases, and beta test the latest software!
Autodesk Knowledge Network | Autodesk Account | Product Feedback
- Marcar como nuevo
- Favorito
- Suscribir
- Silenciar
- Suscribirse a un feed RSS
- Resaltar
- Imprimir
- Denunciar
Hi, thanks but this is not a valley angle...
Attached below shows what a valley angle is. I need angle C
john.vellek has embedded your image(s) for clarity
- Marcar como nuevo
- Favorito
- Suscribir
- Silenciar
- Suscribirse a un feed RSS
- Resaltar
- Imprimir
- Denunciar
Give the UCS command and then the ZA option (Z axis). Click two point along one of the edges so that the z axis is collinear to it.
Now give the plan command and you will be viewing the object down the z axis. You can add an angular dimension between any two lines each of which lies on one of the two planes to give you the valley angle. The angle will be determined for the current xy plane which is perpendicular to the two surfaces.
Note, I found a reference that defined the valley angle as the angle between the two surfaces. This is different than the illustration you provided.
- Marcar como nuevo
- Favorito
- Suscribir
- Silenciar
- Suscribirse a un feed RSS
- Resaltar
- Imprimir
- Denunciar
I don't think we're talking about the same thing here... take a look at the attachment, I need the slope of the angle in red.
Here is a calculator to determine a valley angle. Do you want to run a calc to see if it matches what you got? I'm not sure what angles you used in your example to come up with 113.37
http://bulksolidsflow.com.au/free_programs/valley_angles/valley_angles.html
- Marcar como nuevo
- Favorito
- Suscribir
- Silenciar
- Suscribirse a un feed RSS
- Resaltar
- Imprimir
- Denunciar
GCS is active
Send UCS
Clic 1 and, before you clic 2, enter and validate .z then @ and validate and then
Clic 2
@0,0,1
Done with the UCS you need to measure or dim.
edit : X warrantied to be paralell to GCS, you can use ortho for the third anonymous point of a angular dim wich base point is 1 (your new 0,0), second point is 2.
- Marcar como nuevo
- Favorito
- Suscribir
- Silenciar
- Suscribirse a un feed RSS
- Resaltar
- Imprimir
- Denunciar
It's simpler than any of that....
DIST command, pick points at the bottom and top of the valley. One of the things reported is the:
Angle from XY Plane = [whatever it is, subject to your angular Units mode and precision settings]
- Marcar como nuevo
- Favorito
- Suscribir
- Silenciar
- Suscribirse a un feed RSS
- Resaltar
- Imprimir
- Denunciar
@Kent1Cooper wrote:It's simpler than any of that....
DIST command, pick points at the bottom and top of the valley. One of the things reported is the:
Angle from XY Plane = [whatever it is, subject to your angular Units mode and precision settings]
Very true. Typically so easy that we forget it !
- Marcar como nuevo
- Favorito
- Suscribir
- Silenciar
- Suscribirse a un feed RSS
- Resaltar
- Imprimir
- Denunciar