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I can't find the unconstrained point

Cad4fish
Enthusiast

I can't find the unconstrained point

Cad4fish
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Can someone take a look at this file and see where I have an unconstrained point.? I'm able to extrude the part and move on, but this is driving me crazy.

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Replies (15)

jeff_strater
Community Manager
Community Manager

It's here:

 

Screenshot 2023-10-02 at 4.20.13 PM.png

 

adding this dimension will fully constrain the sketch:

Screenshot 2023-10-02 at 4.20.38 PM.png


Jeff Strater
Engineering Director
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HughesTooling
Consultant
Consultant

@Cad4fish The way you created this sketch is not very efficient, you should try keeping the sketch as simple as possible and add features like fillets to the model. You also used the Fix constraint that means the sketch is not parametric and edits would be difficult.

You can simplify the sketch to just this. I wasn't sure about the depth of the slot so rounded it to 1.1".

HughesTooling_0-1696326407197.png

Then add the fillets to the model. File's attached.

HughesTooling_1-1696326489190.png

 

 

 

Mark Hughes
Owner, Hughes Tooling
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TheCADWhisperer
Consultant
Consultant

In addition to the comments by @HughesTooling  to simplify by adding fillets as Features rather than in sketch - I would also use Slot and I would make use of symmetry about the Origin (this will pay dividends later).

TheCADWhisperer_0-1696336814223.png

There is no need to trim - that would only complicate the constraints.

 

TheCADWhisperer_1-1696336858667.png

You could select the top arc and mash x on the keyboard to convert to Construction, but again, this isn't really necessary.

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Cad4fish
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Thanks for that.  I did not notice the color of that dot and would have never thought the end of a construction line needed a dimension.

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Cad4fish
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

My limited experience with solid modeling is with Inventor.  Why is it better to fillet the model rather than the sketch?  The depth of the slot is not very important; only the width.

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Cad4fish
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Can you explain a bit about symmetry about the origin?

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Cad4fish
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Thanks to all of you for your replies.  I need to do another one just like this, but with a wider slot.

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Cad4fish
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Maybe I should add that this is for a plasma cutting table.

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TheCADWhisperer
Consultant
Consultant

@Cad4fish wrote:

 I need to do another one just like this, but with a wider slot.


@Cad4fish 

Attach your new file here.

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nigel76FS8
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

If you add a parameter for the diameter of the circle, you can then change that and the slot width will auto-update. Which is half the point of using a parametric bit of software. Likewise, a parameter for the chamfer or fillet can make life far easier.

 

 

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davebYYPCU
Consultant
Consultant

2d Profile cutting is a 3 step process.

 

Simple sketch,

model the plate to finished outline,

export face of the plate with new sketch.

 

If you donโ€™t (want to) model the plate, (with modelling fillets etc,) you will be struggling with sketch constraints all day.

 

Might help....

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Cad4fish
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

I've been extruding my sketches to the thickness of the material and just following the Langmuir steps for manufacture/cutting.  I don't know that extruding the part to the exact thickness in F360 is terribly important.  You are going to set the i/m in F360 and set the amps and psi on the plasma cutter.  I've made a few throw-away designs to learn the machine.  This will be my second tool.  The first was a wrench to replace a lost router wrench.

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nigel76FS8
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Yes, but you might as well set it to the correct thickness. It's no more effort.
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davebYYPCU
Consultant
Consultant

You didn't say if you need step3, (using Fusion CAM after step 2?)

 

wrnch1.PNGwrnch2.PNGwrnch3.PNG

 

Might help....

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Cad4fish
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

I finished the wrench.  It's the one in the photo.

 

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