Is it possible to move drawing sketch to top layer?

Is it possible to move drawing sketch to top layer?

emimo18
Participant Participant
2,365 Views
6 Replies
Message 1 of 7

Is it possible to move drawing sketch to top layer?

emimo18
Participant
Participant

Hello all,

 

I want to know if it is possible to move a drawing sketch to the top layer  in Inventor so sketches do not intertwine as seen in image 1 below. What i want is for the sketch to look like image 2. I made image 2 with windows "snip and sketch" tool in case you are wondering about that. 

 

Image 1.

Image 1.png

Image 2.
Image 2.png

 Thanks for reading. 

 

Emil Møller

 

  

0 Likes
2,366 Views
6 Replies
Replies (6)
Message 2 of 7

JDMather
Consultant
Consultant

Can you use a Sketch Symbol rather than a sketch?


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Autodesk Inventor 2019 Certified Professional
Autodesk AutoCAD 2013 Certified Professional
Certified SolidWorks Professional


Message 3 of 7

emimo18
Participant
Participant

I tried that. The same clipping issue appear. See image 1 below for an example. When i export as a pdf it becomes even worse. See image 2.

 

Image 1.

Image 3.png

Image 2, pdf.

Image 4.png

 

 

0 Likes
Message 4 of 7

johnsonshiue
Community Manager
Community Manager

Hi! The only workflow I can think of is to use Sketch Symbol with Filled Text (all spaces). Create one horizontal bar and  one vertical bar. After that, rotate the symbol 45 deg. The Filled Text does clip over the view geometry.

Many thanks!



Johnson Shiue (johnson.shiue@autodesk.com)
Software Test Engineer
Message 5 of 7

emimo18
Participant
Participant

Hi. Thanks for your reply. I tried using a sketch symbol as you suggest. It works great when it is placed in front of a drawing view and nothing else. Then no clipping issues occur. But i have several sketches i made in a view and that is when clipping issues will appear from what i have gathered. If the number of sketches in a view is larger than 1 and the sketches are placed on top of eachother clipping issues will occur. I am tempted to conclude that inventor is not the proper tool at the moment to use when i want to add fetures such as these to my drawings. I would even go as far as to say that it is probably best to stick with pure technical drawings when using Inventor. Thanks again for your reply. I appreciate it very much.

0 Likes
Message 6 of 7

swalton
Mentor
Mentor

Another choice would be creating a very thin extrusion in the 3d modeling environment, then showing or hiding it in the various drawing views.  That way Inventor's normal drawing view calculation would clip the objects behind the extrusion.

 

 

Steve Walton
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.

EESignature


Inventor 2025
Vault Professional 2025
Message 7 of 7

emimo18
Participant
Participant

Thanks for your reply. I considered doing that too. It is a good solution but not exaclty what i want. I often make drawings that goes a bit beyond just a technical drawing because i frequently add descriptive sketches and custom symbols to my drawing views. I wanted to keep these edits all in my drawings. I am not fond of editing my parts to create visuals for my drawings. It just seems like it will become messy if i start doing that to all my parts. But i can definitly do that as a last resort. So it is a good suggestion. Thanks.

0 Likes