Elet88
Guest
Hello everyone,
I hope to post this question in the right section.
I have always followed the world of cad with passion and it seems that it can finally turn everything into a profession. for this I am informing myself about every manual at my disposal. but I am forced to intervene with a post because I need your help from expert designers on a topic that if you have to see it with the theory before going to the cad program.
Let's imagine that I am required to draw a simple 100 mm long pipe in cad, which was folded exactly in half (i.e. 50 mm) with a 90° angle. I have all these data and I can draw this pipe in cad without thoughts, but if it were put in my hand this tube of which I I don't know, how can I find exactly its bending radius and calculate exactly its length to prepare a design in which specific angle and bending point? what procedures and tools should I use? (because the eye fold might look 90°, but actually be 85° or 95°).
and said this, how can you perform these calculations on much more complex pieces (such as a crane load hook, which at least will have ten different rays)?
thanks in advance,
Marco:finger:
I hope to post this question in the right section.
I have always followed the world of cad with passion and it seems that it can finally turn everything into a profession. for this I am informing myself about every manual at my disposal. but I am forced to intervene with a post because I need your help from expert designers on a topic that if you have to see it with the theory before going to the cad program.
Let's imagine that I am required to draw a simple 100 mm long pipe in cad, which was folded exactly in half (i.e. 50 mm) with a 90° angle. I have all these data and I can draw this pipe in cad without thoughts, but if it were put in my hand this tube of which I I don't know, how can I find exactly its bending radius and calculate exactly its length to prepare a design in which specific angle and bending point? what procedures and tools should I use? (because the eye fold might look 90°, but actually be 85° or 95°).
and said this, how can you perform these calculations on much more complex pieces (such as a crane load hook, which at least will have ten different rays)?
thanks in advance,
Marco:finger: