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I freely admit that I'm an utter newb at this, so apologies for probably phrasing what I want to do incorrectly.
The goal is to wind up with a set of cuts that extend from a sloped face (the top of an object) towards the bottom (flat) face. However, each cut should be a fixed depth and with a flat (parallel to the bottom face) bottom.
Basic description of goal is an object holder (pens and other things) with a sloped top face and multiple holes (in several rows and more than one hole in each row). If equal-length objects are placed in the holes, the ones in the back (towards the back of the top face) should rest higher than those in the lower (towards the front) holes.
The first thing I tried (which failed) was sketching the holes on the top face and extruding cuts from them. This failed because the cuts extended perpendicular to the top face, Upon further thought, I realized that even if it had worked (extruding to the bottom face), it wouldn't have worked because the holes would be sized and spaced incorrectly (due to the distortion of projecting the sloped face onto the flat side).
Next attempt (which works, sort of) was to sketch on the bottom face and then extrude, starting at the top face and coming downwards for the desired distance. This "almost" works but the bottoms of the holes are sloped parallel to the top face, not to the bottom face.
The only other thing I've tried which "feels" like it should work (but doesn't) was to break the object into two "pieces" - a basic "brick" (extruded rectangle) with an extruded wedge on top of it and sketching the cut pattern on the top of the brick. My thought had been to do a two-direction extrusion from that pattern (to object to the top face) with, ideally, setting a total extrusion distance to the desired distance. I don't see any way to do that, though.
This "feels" like it should be possible without doing a whole bunch of external math or needing to fine-tune each of the cuts (or at least each of the rows) to get the extrusion length "just right".
What am I missing? Or is this just really something that there isn't an easy way to do?
Solved! Go to Solution.