Testing the Cutting Edge of Boolean Operations
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In a recent post, a user focused on a problem any user of Fusion with more than a passing interest encounters- close to co-located surfaces can not be Combined/Joined/Cut:
https://forums.autodesk.com/t5/fusion-360-design-validate/cut-out-irregular-shaped-body/m-p/8318719
Practically, how closely conforming can two surfaces be and still perform a successful Join/Cut/Combine? We should have at least a rough idea before contriving designs that include these operations.
Attempting to define the confines of Boolean capacity, I began by Revolve cutting a 1 meter sphere from another identical sphere. Despite apparent complete removal of both Bodies, a Body was still listed in the Browser. Suspecting the presence of micro artifacts, I created an enclosing Body and performed an Interference Inspection, with no Interference reported. The Body has no volume.
Curious. Rolling the History Marker to before the Cut, I added an extreme offset between the two Bodies- 0.000000009 -and performed another Revolve Cut. Predictably, the results where the same- a phantom Body with no volume/contents. I followed up with progressive shifts until a Body was produced. The value? over 15.8 mm: no body was produced until the offset exceeded the thickness of a typical finger.
Maybe this just has something to do with a revolved sphere? Starting over with a 1 meter Extruded cube, a complete Cut produced another phantom Body. A Body 0.000014101 mm thick results from a cut distance of 999.999985899 mm - virtually nothing. Rotating a co-located cube 0.0001 and Combine Cutting produced 4 Faces having no reported thickness- diaphanous, but something.
Maybe @jeff_strater cold provide some insight that would aid our consideration.
Find tested designs attached.