How Do You Scale Objects In A Pattern?

How Do You Scale Objects In A Pattern?

mpikas
Explorer Explorer
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Message 1 of 4

How Do You Scale Objects In A Pattern?

mpikas
Explorer
Explorer

How do you make a pattern that scales from one end to the other?

 

I've run into this problem multiple times and have never come up with an answer that doesn't require a lot of work to get it done, and right now I have a case where I need many different steps/sizes- I've been thinking of designing some 3D printed toolbox organizers and I need things like a wrench holder that holds wrenches from 10mm to 19mm in 7 steps, the wrenches on the bottom left in this picture:

 

IMG_20200408_142308322.jpg

 

The ones on the right are SAE and slightly different sizes, I have 3 more drawers of different wrenches, the smallest set has 4 wrenches, the largest 19, all sorts of different sizes and configurations, so a quick way of scaling both the spacing and size would be necessary to make this practical. What I was thinking about is basically a sawtooth shaped rack, that holds the wrenches up at an angle so they take up less space and use a bit of the available height in the drawer but save surface area, something like this but more robust (maybe the two sides connected together, I have a few of the black ones in my main wrench drawer and they work OK but only work well with wrenches of a specific size range):
5160_16_Reverse_wrench_Red_inuse.jpg   
789455051606.MAIN.jpgAnnotation 2020-08-24 073803.png

Other examples just from just this project are organizing this drawer, things like these endmills (box on the left), fly cutters (3 things in the top middle), drillbits (those are 9/16" to 1-1/4" in the box of blue boxes in the middle) or the pile of sockets that everyone has.  

20180311_192347.jpg

 

All of these things are repeating patterns that change in both size and spacing in a regular interval. 

The closest thing that I've seen to doing this quickly/well is Lars Christensen's video here at the 17minute mark where he uses the 'adjust' option in the pattern tool:
https://youtu.be/pUm2Uy3OMw4
(I just watched it a few minutes ago, I haven't quite wrapped my brain around if you can "adjust" both size and spacing yet)

I've wondered if you could get this to work using parametric modeling and some math but like it would be clumsy and setting up the parametric model would likely not be necessary for most uses (like I probably would want to customize the wrench racks for the specific wrenches so I'd only use the parametric model for 2 sets of racks and then setup another). 

 

 

How would you do it?  Ideas?

 

 

 

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Message 2 of 4

baptiste.garciaR77J7
Observer
Observer

I've just experienced the same problem here. It should be very usefull.

You can also imagine a Fibonacci serie to do some interesting design or new topology

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Message 3 of 4

mango.freund
Advisor
Advisor
I think that it is not possible to scale in a meaningful way within the pattern, since it would not only relate to the size of the mouth but also disproportionately to the length and strength. These problems can be narrowed down from component to component by parameterizing them. assembling is another problem. greetings mango
Message 4 of 4

TrippyLighting
Consultant
Consultant

@baptiste.garciaR77J7 Your problem space is different as you can apply mathematical or algorithmic rules to solve it. I was going to suggest Autodesk Dynamo but unfortunately it seems to have been discontinued.


EESignature

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