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middle constrain

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Message 1 of 18
Dan_Margulius
4420 Views, 17 Replies

middle constrain

Dan_Margulius
Advisor
Advisor

Hello ,

 

I have 3 parts (cubes) in assembly. I want the middle one to stay in the middle always. I hope it is clear.

For example if the offset between faces is 100 then the middle is 50. If the offset changes to 200 then the new middle is 100 and I want the middle part to adjust automatically. I am attaching a picture . How can this be done with constraints.

 

Thanks,

Dan 

0 Likes

middle constrain

Hello ,

 

I have 3 parts (cubes) in assembly. I want the middle one to stay in the middle always. I hope it is clear.

For example if the offset between faces is 100 then the middle is 50. If the offset changes to 200 then the new middle is 100 and I want the middle part to adjust automatically. I am attaching a picture . How can this be done with constraints.

 

Thanks,

Dan 

17 REPLIES 17
Message 2 of 18
Steve_Bahr
in reply to: Dan_Margulius

Steve_Bahr
Advocate
Advocate

What is your design intent?

 

If you want the middle cube to remain stationary, always, you could constrain it to the assembly's origin planes, ground it and delele the constraints you just created.  Note that the first part placed in your assembly is always grounded, so you'll need to remove the grounding first.  Then you could constrain each of the other cubes to the origin planes of the middle cube.  Use parameters to make the offsets equal to eachother.  This process also works if you need one of the other cubes grounded.

Steve Bahr...since 1962.
______________________________________________________________
Please mark this response as "Accept as Solution" if I was successful in answering your question.
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What is your design intent?

 

If you want the middle cube to remain stationary, always, you could constrain it to the assembly's origin planes, ground it and delele the constraints you just created.  Note that the first part placed in your assembly is always grounded, so you'll need to remove the grounding first.  Then you could constrain each of the other cubes to the origin planes of the middle cube.  Use parameters to make the offsets equal to eachother.  This process also works if you need one of the other cubes grounded.

Steve Bahr...since 1962.
______________________________________________________________
Please mark this response as "Accept as Solution" if I was successful in answering your question.
Message 3 of 18
Dan_Margulius
in reply to: Steve_Bahr

Dan_Margulius
Advisor
Advisor

Hello Steve,

 

This is an educational question. How can I make a part adjust to the middle whenever the parts from the right and left size

move apart or come close to one another.

 

Thanks,

Dan

0 Likes

Hello Steve,

 

This is an educational question. How can I make a part adjust to the middle whenever the parts from the right and left size

move apart or come close to one another.

 

Thanks,

Dan

Message 4 of 18
Steve_Bahr
in reply to: Dan_Margulius

Steve_Bahr
Advocate
Advocate
Accepted solution

Hi Dan.

 

Try this.  I hope you have IV 2010.  In the assembly, edit constraint Flush4 and watch what happens.  Constraint Flush9 is dependent on Flush4.

 

Is that what you're after?

Steve Bahr...since 1962.
______________________________________________________________
Please mark this response as "Accept as Solution" if I was successful in answering your question.
0 Likes

Hi Dan.

 

Try this.  I hope you have IV 2010.  In the assembly, edit constraint Flush4 and watch what happens.  Constraint Flush9 is dependent on Flush4.

 

Is that what you're after?

Steve Bahr...since 1962.
______________________________________________________________
Please mark this response as "Accept as Solution" if I was successful in answering your question.
Message 5 of 18

Dan_Margulius
Advisor
Advisor

Hello,

I am checking...

 

Thank you,

Dan 

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Hello,

I am checking...

 

Thank you,

Dan 

Message 6 of 18
Anonymous
in reply to: Dan_Margulius

Anonymous
Not applicable

Schermafdruk 2017-08-01 11.51.41.pngSchermafdruk 2017-08-01 11.51.54.png

 

So I wanted to use a middle constrains to keep the two high lighted parts in place. Both slide back and forth. The middle constrain found in Solidworks does the job beautifully, in Inventor (where there are just a few weird working constrains) I couldn't find it. What I want is to select the faces of the part in the middle and simply say: stay in the middle of these faces and select the faces where they should be in the middle in. Easy

as that, when you change the size of the hole/guide or the slider it self it stays in the middle. 

Schermafdruk 2017-08-01 11.51.41.pngSchermafdruk 2017-08-01 11.51.54.png

 

So I wanted to use a middle constrains to keep the two high lighted parts in place. Both slide back and forth. The middle constrain found in Solidworks does the job beautifully, in Inventor (where there are just a few weird working constrains) I couldn't find it. What I want is to select the faces of the part in the middle and simply say: stay in the middle of these faces and select the faces where they should be in the middle in. Easy

as that, when you change the size of the hole/guide or the slider it self it stays in the middle. 

Message 7 of 18
Anonymous
in reply to: Steve_Bahr

Anonymous
Not applicable

Sorry but it's seems like only the way how to make more work. Not a solvation.

 

Constrain must make automatically without offsetting parts from each other.

 

8 years pasted after this post. 

 

Does anybody knows how really solve it?

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Sorry but it's seems like only the way how to make more work. Not a solvation.

 

Constrain must make automatically without offsetting parts from each other.

 

8 years pasted after this post. 

 

Does anybody knows how really solve it?

Message 8 of 18
johnsonshiue
in reply to: Anonymous

johnsonshiue
Community Manager
Community Manager

Hi Guys,

 

I thought Symmetry constraint has been there for a while (2012 or later). Could you try using Symmetry constraint and see if it works for you?

Many thanks!

 



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

Hi Guys,

 

I thought Symmetry constraint has been there for a while (2012 or later). Could you try using Symmetry constraint and see if it works for you?

Many thanks!

 



Johnson Shiue (johnson.shiue@autodesk.com)
Software Test Engineer
Message 9 of 18

Dan_Margulius
Advisor
Advisor

Hi 

The Symmetry constraint  Inventor has is not what people are asking. 

The only thing i found to overcome this limitation is "Between two faces " in the Joints.

At this point after waiting so long and seeing your remark it means that for 8 years nobody understood what we need 

or it was ignored on purpose 

Thanks

Dan


@johnsonshiue wrote:

Hi Guys,

 

I thought Symmetry constraint has been there for a while (2012 or later). Could you try using Symmetry constraint and see if it works for you?

Many thanks!

 


 

Hi 

The Symmetry constraint  Inventor has is not what people are asking. 

The only thing i found to overcome this limitation is "Between two faces " in the Joints.

At this point after waiting so long and seeing your remark it means that for 8 years nobody understood what we need 

or it was ignored on purpose 

Thanks

Dan


@johnsonshiue wrote:

Hi Guys,

 

I thought Symmetry constraint has been there for a while (2012 or later). Could you try using Symmetry constraint and see if it works for you?

Many thanks!

 


 

Message 10 of 18
TheCADWhisperer
in reply to: Anonymous

TheCADWhisperer
Consultant
Consultant

@Anonymouswrote:

Does anybody knows how really solve it?


If you start a new thread (you can link back to this one for reference if desired) and attach your assembly here - I will show you the correct way to solve this problem.  (Assuming you have Inventor 2017, 2018 or 2019.)

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@Anonymouswrote:

Does anybody knows how really solve it?


If you start a new thread (you can link back to this one for reference if desired) and attach your assembly here - I will show you the correct way to solve this problem.  (Assuming you have Inventor 2017, 2018 or 2019.)

Message 11 of 18
Anonymous
in reply to: TheCADWhisperer

Anonymous
Not applicable

Hi.

 

Time passed, but I still cant't find normal solution.

In attach step file with two pipes assembly.

The task is to put the part in the center of another part. (Without planes constrain)

Please try

 

0 Likes

Hi.

 

Time passed, but I still cant't find normal solution.

In attach step file with two pipes assembly.

The task is to put the part in the center of another part. (Without planes constrain)

Please try

 

Message 12 of 18
hosford
in reply to: Anonymous

hosford
Collaborator
Collaborator

utilizing the symmetry constraint allows you to do what you are looking for.

assuming you design a plane mid way between the faces of the central part, then use this plane as your symmetry base.

 

Thaddeus Hosford
NUC9i9QNX i9-9980HK, Win 10 Pro 64
Nvidia GTX 1650
Inventor 2021

utilizing the symmetry constraint allows you to do what you are looking for.

assuming you design a plane mid way between the faces of the central part, then use this plane as your symmetry base.

 

Thaddeus Hosford
NUC9i9QNX i9-9980HK, Win 10 Pro 64
Nvidia GTX 1650
Inventor 2021
Message 13 of 18
Anonymous
in reply to: hosford

Anonymous
Not applicable

Hi,

 

Sorry but the point was constrain two simple details without using plane of any. Only faces

 

Your variant is with three more parts and using plane of one of them.

 

Thanks for try

0 Likes

Hi,

 

Sorry but the point was constrain two simple details without using plane of any. Only faces

 

Your variant is with three more parts and using plane of one of them.

 

Thanks for try

Message 14 of 18
SBix26
in reply to: Anonymous

SBix26
Mentor
Mentor

Sorry, can't be done as you have posed the problem.  Why do you need to impose these conditions?  To "prove" that another software application is superior?


Sam B
Inventor Pro 2019.3 | Windows 7 SP1
LinkedIn

Sorry, can't be done as you have posed the problem.  Why do you need to impose these conditions?  To "prove" that another software application is superior?


Sam B
Inventor Pro 2019.3 | Windows 7 SP1
LinkedIn

Message 15 of 18
hosford
in reply to: Anonymous

hosford
Collaborator
Collaborator
Thaddeus Hosford
NUC9i9QNX i9-9980HK, Win 10 Pro 64
Nvidia GTX 1650
Inventor 2021

Thaddeus Hosford
NUC9i9QNX i9-9980HK, Win 10 Pro 64
Nvidia GTX 1650
Inventor 2021
Message 16 of 18
Anonymous
in reply to: SBix26

Anonymous
Not applicable

Very often designing construction I better put parts by middle of each other. Then after change part width or length, symetry of construction will stay.

But if You start speak about superior of another sowtware, why do not build such function for Inventor? 

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Very often designing construction I better put parts by middle of each other. Then after change part width or length, symetry of construction will stay.

But if You start speak about superior of another sowtware, why do not build such function for Inventor? 

Message 17 of 18
SBix26
in reply to: Anonymous

SBix26
Mentor
Mentor

When working with actual physical parts, there are no features to constrain them to be centered.  The fact that you can use origin planes or work planes to do so in a solid modeling application is a benefit of the software, and the obvious way to accomplish what you're asking. 

 

Why would you demand that the software not use the tools provided for the task?  It's like telling a craftsman to drive a screw into a piece of wood, but no fair using a screwdriver-- you have to use a saw!  I'm having trouble understanding your desire to not use planes for this task; that's exactly what they're for!


Sam B
Inventor Pro 2019.3 | Windows 7 SP1
LinkedIn

 

When working with actual physical parts, there are no features to constrain them to be centered.  The fact that you can use origin planes or work planes to do so in a solid modeling application is a benefit of the software, and the obvious way to accomplish what you're asking. 

 

Why would you demand that the software not use the tools provided for the task?  It's like telling a craftsman to drive a screw into a piece of wood, but no fair using a screwdriver-- you have to use a saw!  I'm having trouble understanding your desire to not use planes for this task; that's exactly what they're for!


Sam B
Inventor Pro 2019.3 | Windows 7 SP1
LinkedIn

 

Message 18 of 18
DRoam
in reply to: Anonymous

DRoam
Mentor
Mentor

@Anonymous's request is a legitimate one. Nothing wrong with asking if there's a better way to do something. And if there isn't, nothing wrong with asking why (especially after 8 years).

 

This is a logged wish that you can vote for here: Symmetric constraint involving a Width Mate like solidworks.

 

Currently has 73 votes. Add another 50 if you count the duplicates. Add 50 more if you count this idea, which was marked as implemented even though the Symmetry constraint only works for one type of symmetry condition. It can't center something between two faces on a part, or center two pairs of faces with each other. Hence all the remaining duplicates and ongoing discussions like this one...

@Anonymous's request is a legitimate one. Nothing wrong with asking if there's a better way to do something. And if there isn't, nothing wrong with asking why (especially after 8 years).

 

This is a logged wish that you can vote for here: Symmetric constraint involving a Width Mate like solidworks.

 

Currently has 73 votes. Add another 50 if you count the duplicates. Add 50 more if you count this idea, which was marked as implemented even though the Symmetry constraint only works for one type of symmetry condition. It can't center something between two faces on a part, or center two pairs of faces with each other. Hence all the remaining duplicates and ongoing discussions like this one...

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