My first try at the sequence valve housing. After a few mistakes, I decided to try again. |
This is actually my second try. I had a first iteration, but I wasn't happy with it so I just decided to start again with a clean slate.
What can I say? Life happens! But I learned, and the new model will be better than its predecessor.
But in the process, I was cleaning some excess material with the sweep command, and ran into something that left me with a combination of surprise, puzzlement, with a touch of frustration.
The model path that I chose for my sweep wasn't complete. The cut I was intending to make came up short.
The sweep coming up short, it should continue around the back of the part. |
I mean, I couldn't have made a mistake, right? Right.... Of course not.....
Thankfully, I have years of 3D modeling experience behind me. And when I say "years of 3D modeling experience", I mean "years of recovering from making mistakes building 3D models"!
So once my initial feeling of frustration passed, my troubleshooting brain kicked in and my experience told me to check the tangency of the sketch.
The arrow shows where I missed a tangent |
So I went ahead and checked the tangency of the path. Sure enough. I had missed a tangent constraint.
You can see it in the image to the right. On the left side of the highlighted area, there's a tangent constraint. On the right, not so much....
So I added that in, and tried it again..
Guess what! It worked like a charm! A small thing, but an important one.
So remember, whether your using Fusion 360, Autodesk Inventor, Solidworks, or another CAD tool, remember that one of the best set of tools you can have is a good set of troubleshooting steps!
Victory! |
And remember.... Watch those tangents!
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