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Hi Everyone,
I'm new to inventor, but generally familiar with CAD, Revit, Sketchup, etc., so not necessarily new to modeling in general. In searching for solutions to this question, I've found many posts that seem to touch on it, but nothing that has provided a solution for me as of yet, so I apologize if this is a repeat question.
When filleting two faces, the fillet projects in the wrong direction, seemingly completely at random (concave vs. convex). The general consensus seems to be that the two faces are not meeting, whereby creating two different solid bodies, causing the fillet to go convex on one body as opposed to concave between both. This makes sense, except for the random nature at which it occurs. For example, one side of the item in question will perform correctly, and the other will not, and/or the command will not execute properly (for hours on end) and then just "work" on my 35th try.
I have gone back and cleaned up/checked my individual parts of the assembly, and gone as far as completely redrawing every part in AutoCAD again, and recreating each part individually in inventor, and reassembling, seemingly to a lower success rate this time around.
When you perform a fillet, a little gold arrow appears showing the direction in which the fillet will execute, is there a way to tell the software to reverse that direction? Is there an analyze command that will show me if I still have gaps in my model between two parts of an assembly? Is there a magic number of tries at which point this will just correct automatically? I have tried selecting fewer lines at a time in each group of selections, this sometimes helps. I have also tried starting my selection process at different points along the path I wish to fillet, which also sometimes seems to help, but the random nature at which this command works is driving me crazy, and seems to defy the "logic" that computers are supposed to be driven by. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Solved! Go to Solution.