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Stuck on sheet metal rectangle 'cone' funnel thing with flanges

guy_pc8Z25V
Explorer

Stuck on sheet metal rectangle 'cone' funnel thing with flanges

guy_pc8Z25V
Explorer
Explorer

Hi all! 

 

I'm trying to make a metal rectangle 'funnel' using the sheet metal tools in fusion.

 

I want to eventually end up with 4 different panels which i can send off to be laser cut, so in the end i can bend them and weld them together. 

I made this using the solid tools fine, but then i realised i wanted to create a flat pattern and could only do this via sheet metal tools so i started again. 

guy_pc8Z25V_0-1728400221700.png

 I have ended up with this monstrosity below as a rough creation... Which if I could remove the 'excess' of the flanges, i think i should be able to separate the 4 bodies into different components and then generate a flat pattern for each of them? I could obviously keep going chopping and changing till it looks like what i'm wanting, but i thought i would post here and see how you guys might get around this?  I'd love to be able to use the lofted flange, but it didn't quite seem to work out for me for some reason.. It created the whole part with no seam anywhere, so obviously couldn't be flattened. 

 

guy_pc8Z25V_1-1728400310771.png

Hopefully the dimensions and sheet metal rule are included in the exported file! First time doing this. 

 

Thanks for any help, I'd really like to see how other people might do this, and i don't seem to be able to come across any similar scenarios online haha! 

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Accepted solutions (1)
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guy_pc8Z25V
Explorer
Explorer
Accepted solution

Well, I managed to get the lofted flange tool to work but i had to create two sketches with the opposite 'lines' instead of being able to use a rectangle, as the lofted flange tool wouldn't let me select a single line of the square in a sketch, it tried to select the whole square and failed to work. I then worked from the base upwards and created the top lip from the flange tool and split the body to get the mitred corners. 

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Warmingup1953
Advisor
Advisor

What about this approach?...This is just a rough draft

aaaa.jpg

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guy_pc8Z25V
Explorer
Explorer

Pretty much exactly how i managed to solve it in my next upload haha!! Couldn't believe it. Soon as i figured out how to get the lofted flange working it took 2 seconds to finish!! Super annoying but every day is a school day haha! 

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guy_pc8Z25V
Explorer
Explorer

I thought I could create an offset plane, create a new sketch and put my final funnel square in, and loft each individual 'lip' at the top down to the square, but the tool kept selecting the entire square. So i created two square sketches, one with the left/right lines as construction, and one with the top/bottom as construction. That allowed me to select each individual line for a lofted flange. Maybe i'm just stupid and cant select the individual lines when it's a full square in one sketch haha! 

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evanp4509U4JZ
Collaborator
Collaborator

In the menu for lofted flange there is a tick box for "allow chaining". That may be the issue as when I tried, it is automatically checked. Maybe unchecking it will allow single line selection.

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evanp4509U4JZ
Collaborator
Collaborator

"chain selection" not "allow chaining".

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johnsonshiue
Community Manager
Community Manager

Hi! Here is another solution without using explicit Sheet Metal features. The Sheet Metal workflows are best to design unfoldable sheet metal parts in one piece. When there are compound angles or multiple pieces are needed, the Sheet Metal commands may not be as flexible as they should be.

Instead, I leverage Surface Modeling techniques to create the exterior shape. And use Chamfer to create the gaps fitting the panels. The rest is pretty straight forward.

Many thanks!

 

johnsonshiue_0-1728524120440.png

 



Johnson Shiue (johnson.shiue@autodesk.com)
Software Test Engineer
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user015M86Y
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Hi, see my proposal attached

Four sheet of bend sheet metal to weld together

See the draft function to get the angle plate

Transform each bodies to components in order to create four flat pattern with boundary fill (ref John HACKNEY)

user015M86Y_0-1728644759680.png

 

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