Constrain sketch to another sketch on a perpendicular plane

wfp21
Contributor
Contributor

Constrain sketch to another sketch on a perpendicular plane

wfp21
Contributor
Contributor

I am unable to find a method to constrain two points on different sketches that are perpendicular to each other.

 

I want to force the centre of a rectangle (red circle) to lie on the tip of an eclipse (red dot) where each are on a different sketch and are perpendicular to each other:

 

wfp21_1-1643914919299.png

Hope that makes sense. I have attached an ipt file in case.

Any suggestions appreciated.

Thanks, Will

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CGBenner
Community Manager
Community Manager

@wfp21 

In Sketch1 place a work point at the top of the arc.  Save that sketch.  In Sketch3, project that point into the sketch, then use a Coincident constraint between the center of the rectangle and the projected point.  Voila.

CGBenner_0-1643915967241.png

 


Chris Benner
Industry Community Manager – Design & Manufacturing


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SBix26
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Consultant

A slight correction: you need a sketch point at the top of the ellipse (though a work point could be used, too).  I see that you already have a sketch point constrained to the ellipse, but it's unconstrained otherwise.  Project the Y-axis to Sketch1, and the sketch point to that line as well:

SBix26_0-1643916531861.png

Now that point is firmly located at the top of the ellipse, and you can project it into the other sketch and constrain to it.


Sam B

Inventor Pro 2022.2.1 | Windows 10 Home 21H2
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CGBenner
Community Manager
Community Manager

@SBix26 @wfp21 

You caught me.... I actually USED a sketch point, and just typed work point!  It's been a long week already.  Thank you for catching that!!


Chris Benner
Industry Community Manager – Design & Manufacturing


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wfp21
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Thanks for you very much for your quick replies but I am still rather confused!

 

How do I constrain my original sketch point in sketch 1? And then how do I project the Y-axis to Sketch1?

A screen-recording of how you solve it would be amazing.

 

Thanks again,

Will

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SBix26
Consultant
Consultant
Accepted solution
  • Use the Project Geometry tool while in the sketch, then pick the Y-axis from the browser
  • Best practice is to change the projected Y-axis to construction type so it's obviously not part of the ellipse profile
  • Start the Coincident Constraint tool and pick the sketch point that is already constrained to the ellipse, then the projected Y-axis; the sketch point will change color to show that it is fully constrained.
  • In Sketch3, use the same Project Geometry tool to project that fully constrained sketch point from Sketch1
  • Use the Coincident Constraint tool to constrain the center of the rectangle to that projected point

This is all really basic stuff-- have you had any training??


Sam B

Inventor Pro 2022.2.1 | Windows 10 Home 21H2
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wfp21
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Contributor

I have had a little training but was unaware of the project geometry tool.

Projecting the point on sketch1 whilst in sketch3 made it visible for a coincident constraint.


Thanks for all your help

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SBix26
Consultant
Consultant

It occurred to me later (middle of the night?) that there is no need for the sketch point or the Y-axis projection-- all that's needed is:

  • In Sketch3, use Project Geometry to project the elliptical arc from Sketch1; it projects as a line, ending at the top of the curve
  • Constrain the rectangle center to the endpoint of the projected line
  • Finished

Sorry about all the extra work instructions the first time around.


Sam B

Inventor Pro 2022.2.1 | Windows 10 Home 21H2
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