The attached assembly contains part "neoprene". Feature "Stitch" in "Neoprene" is constructed from a sketch on a plane tangent to the revolved Sketch1. Pattern "Stitches" is a circular pattern along the projected construction line on the offset plane around the constructed axis. Then I mirrored it across the perpendicular plane.
My initial goal was to offset the first "stitch "by a given distance from the "start" of the revolved body and space evenly. I decided on this technique after watching some YT videos. Is it "correct"?
Is there any way to input arc length distance into circular pattern, or will I have to do something clever with Pi/trig/inverse trig?
Thanks so much
Joe
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by SBix26. Go to Solution.
Hello @theycallmevirgo ,
do you want to use the arc-length (on base cylinder) as distance for the holes?
I would sketch an arc for the holepattern and create an arc-length dimension. After creating the first hole, you can pattern (rectangular pattern!) along the arc-path.
Several things that would make this simpler for you:
I've attached a modified file (2025 format) for you to look at. Here's the Circular Pattern feature I used showing the Midplane control:
Sam B
Inventor Pro 2025.1 | Windows 11 Home 23H2
"do you want to use the arc-length (on base cylinder)"
Yes, that's it exactly. I'll try your approach shortly.
Why do you say using hole reduces the number of workplanes? I'm still using the one offset plane to define the pattern the way I did it originally.
Because Hole location and direction can be defined by point and axis, so a sketch is not required. I used your Sketch2 to define the workpoint and workaxis for the Hole feature, so no further workplanes or sketches required.
Sam B
Inventor Pro 2025.1 | Windows 11 Home 23H2
Here's another pattern method which is probably even better for your purposes. I constrained an arc centered on the projected edge to be the direction for a rectangular pattern, and dimensioned the start point from the edge. In the pattern, I specified the number of instances and that they be distributed evenly along the curve. No calculations or arc length dimensions required.
Sam B
Inventor Pro 2025.1 | Windows 11 Home 23H2
Sorry, but I'm still unclear. Both your technique and my technique use a plane offset from the face created by the revolution, on which we make a sketch from the projected cut surface. What additional planes does my technique use?
Also - in SBv2 is d24 a linear distance, or an arc length? If a linear distance, do you know how to make it an arc length?
ETA NVM I figured that part out
Thanks again
Joe
Also, why is the sketch feature line that defines the hole not a construction line? Why does the part break when I make it a construction line?
Thanks again
Joe
The real problem is, I don't really want to input number of instances for pattern command. I want to do it by arc length spacing and total distance.
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