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The previous forum post (Calculus Cross Section) was useful in seeing a couple of nice techniques, however, I am trying to do the following. Given a base region and a particular type of cross section (i.e. square, semicircle, equilateral triangle, isosceles triangle, etc)perpendicular to either the x or y axis, create the solid (for 3D printing).
Specifically, I was attempting to make one of these with the base being the region enclosed by a parabola, a vertical line, and the x-axis. I've attached how I managed to (mostly) create these but doing non-square, non-equilateral cross sections required me to approximate using loft and a lot of individually created sketches. For squares, I intersected perpendicular extrudes and for the equilateral triangle I intersected two lofts so those were fairly easy.
I feel like I should be able to use loft or sweep to do this but I haven't been able to get it to work properly. The problem is that Loft seems to linearly scale the z-height of the cross section to a point (whereas it should be parabolic in it's z-y plane projection). I also tried using Sweep but because of the region, I couldn't get it to create a solid in many cases (because the three curves were considered one rail I think?).
Ideally, I would be able to draw a single cross section and move that cross section along a perpendicular path being scaled in all dimensions based on fitting between the sketch curves.
Any advice/solution would be exceptionally welcome!
Solved! Go to Solution.