Inventor Patterning Hexagon Shape Twist Rotated 9°

Inventor Patterning Hexagon Shape Twist Rotated 9°

NachoShaw
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Message 1 of 5

Inventor Patterning Hexagon Shape Twist Rotated 9°

NachoShaw
Advisor
Advisor

Hi

Im ok with patterning but had a question come up recently that im not 100% sure about. We have a walkway that is a hexagon shape as you walk through it. its 300mm deep x 2400mm inscribed height. we need to pattern it 20 times in 1 direction (actually, preferred on a spline but linear is ok) but for each pattern element, it needs to be rotated 9 degrees. What is the best approach for this?

 

Thanks

 

Nacho

kelly.young has edited your subject line for clarity: Patterning

Nacho
Automation & Design Engineer

Inventor automation Programmer (C#, VB.Net / iLogic)
Furniture, Sheet Metal, Structural, Metal fab, Tradeshow, Fabrication, CNC

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Tom_Sturtevant
Alumni
Alumni

Hi Nacho,

 

If I understand correctly what you are trying to achieve there is no direct/simple way to do this.  I see a brute-force way to do it with feature pattern: create a pattern of solids (you will have 20 solids) then use direct edit to rotate each one.  It’s not too painful if you only need to do it one time – it took me less than five minutes to get the attached result.

PatternRotate.png

 

Hope this helps....

T.0.M.



Tom Sturtevant
Inventor Part Modeling Developer
Autodesk, Inc.

Message 3 of 5

NachoShaw
Advisor
Advisor

Hi

 

Thanks for the reply. Was thinking more like this but your idea is perfectly reasonable. shame that patterning cannot achieve it but this method works 🙂

 

Cheers1.jpg

Nacho
Automation & Design Engineer

Inventor automation Programmer (C#, VB.Net / iLogic)
Furniture, Sheet Metal, Structural, Metal fab, Tradeshow, Fabrication, CNC

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Message 4 of 5

Tom_Sturtevant
Alumni
Alumni

Oooh – that makes more sense.   Here’s a method to get there (attached).  I created a swept surface with a 180 deg twist, and used that to align the occurrences in a Sketch Based pattern.

 

PR01.pngPR02.pngPR03.png

 

Cheers,

T.0.M.



Tom Sturtevant
Inventor Part Modeling Developer
Autodesk, Inc.

Message 5 of 5

johnsonshiue
Community Manager
Community Manager
Accepted solution

This is a brilliant solution! Many thanks to Tom!

 

 



Johnson Shiue (johnson.shiue@autodesk.com)
Software Test Engineer
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