If I were creating this myself from scratch - I would be very careful to fully constrain the sketch.
I did this for one of the profiles - I was about 90% done with everything fully constrained.
Then I added another line and Inventor got confused on the constraints and most of the sketch showed unconstrained even though I knew it was.
I continued on to the finish just so I would learn the design intent of the original modeler.
Then I looked at how I might simplify my sketch technique so that I did would not confuse Inventor sketch solver again if I started over.
At this point I had a couple of hours work into something that was of no real benefit to me - so I abandoned the effort.
But if it was for my work - I am quite certain that I could significantly simplify my sketch and have a robust fully defined sketch that would be easy to edit for adjustments or for various sizes.
I always consider my first (or two or three) attempts as "throw-away" attempts that I use only for learning purposes.
Each attempt generally goes much faster than the previous attempt and when I finish I can sit back and declare the final attempt a thing of beauty, a work of art. Then I come back a year, month, week, day later and think, "What was I thinking, what a piece of rubbish..." And do it all over again.
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