Just because this example has the sweep at the radius, does not mean that it
cannot go below the surface. See attached... Of course, at some point you
are going to need to lift the tool out of the part.... 🙂
So, JD, what is your more elegant solution?
--
Dennis Jeffrey, AICE, MICE
260-399-6615
Instructor/Author/Sr. App Engr.
AIP 11SP2, AIP 2008
HP Pavillion Zv5000 (Modified)
Geforce Go 440, Driver: .8185, 2GB RAM
XP Pro SP2, Windows Classic Theme
http://www.design-excellence.com
"Dennis Jeffrey" wrote in message
news:5624891@discussion.autodesk.com...
Second try...
Here's a 2008 example using a sweep and a derived ball cut. See attached...
One way to do it....
--
Dennis Jeffrey, AICE, MICE
260-399-6615
Instructor/Author/Sr. App Engr.
AIP 11SP2, AIP 2008
HP Pavillion Zv5000 (Modified)
Geforce Go 440, Driver: .8185, 2GB RAM
XP Pro SP2, Windows Classic Theme
http://www.design-excellence.com
"Dennis Jeffrey" wrote in message
news:5624813@discussion.autodesk.com...
Here's a 2008 example using a sweep and a d
erived ball cut. See attached...
One way to do it....
--
Dennis Jeffrey, AICE, MICE
260-399-6615
Instructor/Author/Sr. App Engr.
AIP 11SP2, AIP 2008
HP Pavillion Zv5000 (Modified)
Geforce Go 440, Driver: .8185, 2GB RAM
XP Pro SP2, Windows Classic Theme
http://www.design-excellence.com
wrote in message news:5624750@discussion.autodesk.com...
>While you cannot sweep a part, you can project the part to a sweep profil