@davebYYPCU wrote:
but I have trubble measuring at an 90 angle, just getting "bad" values.
Huh?
What do you mean with an offset face? Just as in sketching, create an offset plane and snap the objects to that?
Nope,
measure the distance from the bolt face where you put the joint origin, to the outside face of the blue component. What ever that distance is, is the offset for the offset box in the Joint dialogue, so that the pink member is exactly right. No guessing cause it will be flush.
So 720 equals 2 blue bars and the length of the pink one?
When you move the second blue one, move it 660, now its lined up flush. As built rigid joint, Done.
Might help....
Sorry if I'm slow.
Insert blue (40x40 v-slot)
Insert horizontal bar (600 in length, 20x40 v-slot)
Rigid joint on hole, copy paste inspected value from base of hole to flat surface of 40x40 as offset.
Insert blue 2 (40x40 v-slot)
Rigid joint on hole of opposite side of horizontal bar, offset same value as pasted, but -
If I offset from the same hole 2nd 40x40 v-slot will not move if I change the length of the horizontal bar right? Without redefining joints. Isn't it better to joint to the "right" hole, just as I would IRL with a bolt?
If I cut and paste the inspected value (6.223mm from start of hole to flat face of the 40x40 v-slot) the total length is even more off as the inspect is the length, not at a straight angle to the face.
Ofc, getting the math to add up is just as simple as drawing a rectangle from the base, 5,9555 and add that to the offset and the total length will add up. But it feels so, well wrong, as the face of the 40x40 is flat and the horizontal piece is 600mm (currently) so I'm more contemplating if I can define my holes in a way so I don't have to go through so much meassuring for each joint. Feels like I'm missing something fundamentionally easy here...

