• This forum is the machine-generated translation of www.cad3d.it/forum1 - the Italian design community. Several terms are not translated correctly.

toothed wheel tear

  • Thread starter Thread starter giulio1993
  • Start date Start date

giulio1993

Guest
Good morning to all, I am making the table of a tree with a toothed conical wheel of piece to it at its end. the 3d model I am doing it myself and the toothed wheel simplified it with a cone trunk. in the 2d though I would like to make a tear in correspondence of a tooth to represent it and make it clear that it is precisely a toothed wheel but I do not know how to do. I know how to perform a tear but there is nothing to see, obviously nothing in sight.
thanks to all
 
I press that I do not use that software, but what you ask is a partial section (strap???). Maybe you can do it!
 
I press that I do not use that software, but what you ask is a partial section (strap???). Maybe you can do it!
Bye! the problem is not to do the partial section, the problem is that rightly even if I do it, if on the 3d there is nothing, the partial section is useless. I wanted to know if there is a way to avoid having to draw the tooth in the 3d to show it in the 2d
 
the alternative is, if I create it, to draw on the table the tooth as yourself using a tecnigraph
 
I confirm.
You draw it by hand or you do it on 3d.
I have never drawn on a 2d. if I use the sketch function does not make me take any reference to the drawing that I already have in the table, how do I solve?
 
the problem is not the partial section command, which I can use. the problem was to find a faster solution to show the tooth without having to draw it in 3d
No way. on no case. hand drawings on 2d or on 3d. what does not exist does not appear... .
 
hi, I press that the 2d of creo leaves to how much to want.
for me the most agile solution is to model the tooth in 3d (you don't have to do the perfect tooth, you just need to be represented) then proceed as you said, the 3d sketch command (in creo) is much more structured and comfortable than that in 2d (probably this is the intention of those who develop the software, complete association from 3d and 2d )
 
hi, I press that the 2d of creo leaves to how much to want.
for me the most agile solution is to model the tooth in 3d (you don't have to do the perfect tooth, you just need to be represented) then proceed as you said, the 3d sketch command (in creo) is much more structured and comfortable than that in 2d (probably this is the intention of those who develop the software, complete association from 3d and 2d )
Thank you. Now I have a doubt about the sketch function in 2d. is there any way to get references? or I am obliged to draw out of the 2d I have under. It's very uncomfortable for two reasons:
1) You cannot be precise without references and then snap
2) if I move the view ovimante the lines drawn by the sketch in 2d are all staggered because it is as if they were supported
Thank you.
 
Bye-bye.
I always try to avoid sketch 2d in the drawing, because it is difficult to manage, especially thinking about future changes.
if I just can't do a faithfully shaped part, which happens very rarely, the sketch I do on a floor or surface directly in the model. in this case I can take any reference that makes it necessary and I can draw and quota very easily. At the end I find the table already made.
 
Is there any way to get references? ....

in the 3d do a sketch by copying the curves/points of the parts of the teeth so you find yourself in the table setting the sketch 2d . (of course with the plans you can then hide it in the other views, change the style of the lines etc.)
for odds if you can create them in 3d as you need in the table so you just have to activate them/show them

Hi.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
44,997
Messages
339,767
Members
4
Latest member
ibt

Members online

No members online now.
Back
Top