Fede430
Guest
Hey, guys, I'm freaking out, please help me. Can you illustrate how to create a sphere with autodesk inventor 2009?
Thank you.
Thank you.
fulvio perhaps you are right, but we also say that the presentation has left much to desirecmq as first message nothing bad.... .
What presentation? :Mother:fulvio perhaps you are right, but we also say that the presentation has left much to desire![]()
A little weird!What presentation? :Mother:
according to me when you connect as guest to the forum you should open a popup on the rules. At least one cannot say that he did not know that they exist!
or at least when you go to the registration page
It has little to do with the discussion, but I ask you a question:p.s.
that said, the sphere is nothing but the complete rotation of a semicircumference around its diameter. . .
I would like to thank the rapporteur for his work.Sorry to intrude me, but probably our novice meant to draw god. by philosophy manual is found that: "God is an infinite sphere, whose center is everywhere and circumference nowhere." If so, it is clear that you can not easily liquidate the yearly task. Do you agree?
I understand that going to church on Sunday is a ball, but from here to say that God is a sphere...:biggrin:Sorry to intrude me, but probably our novice meant to draw god. by philosophy manual is found that: "God is an infinite sphere, whose center is everywhere and circumference nowhere." If so, it is clear that you can not easily liquidate the yearly task. Do you agree?
ah ah ah ah!!!!:biggrin:I understand that going to church on Sunday is a ball, but from here to say that God is a sphere...
I never placed the problem, however when I do a sketch to "turn" I always make sure it closes with the axis of rotation. therefore the axis of rotation is not a piece of the sketch, and the latter remains open.It has little to do with the discussion, but I ask you a question:
so many years ago, think3's engineer came to install my first cad 3d. He told me that it was better to avoid rotational extrusions where the ends of the sketch to be extruded lie on the rotation axis. this in order to avoid the formation of "degenous" surfaces in the center of rotation.
in the meantime I changed cad but I always kept this habit, do you have opinions about it?
so many years ago, think3's engineer came to install my first cad 3d. He told me that it was better to avoid rotational extrusions where the ends of the sketch to be extruded lie on the rotation axis. this in order to avoid the formation of "degenous" surfaces in the center of rotation.
in the meantime I changed cad but I always kept this habit, do you have opinions about it?
with swx if you make the revolution of an open sketch, with the extremes on the axis of revolution, and you want to get a solid, for example a "c" for a cylinder, signals that he wants a closed sketch and if you give it confirmation he closes it.I never placed the problem, however when I do a sketch to "turn" I always make sure it closes with the axis of rotation. therefore the axis of rotation is not a piece of the sketch, and the latter remains open.
It will be acidity, but if I buy a car with automatic transmission, I do not write on the forums to ask how I put the first...tento for a few minutes and the machine will begin to move.My mother, how you are acidic! no one thought that this poor student has only non-parametric cad experience where the ball command already exists beautiful and done just click the center and widen up to the diameter desiserate?
ok presenting itself is good education but I think you are too taxable....