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1-Visitor
September 12, 2014
Question

How to assemble to Sheet Metal Holes

  • September 12, 2014
  • 3 replies
  • 3699 views

Hello,

I have a user who has modelled some parts in sheet metal.

They consist of curved vanes, some 6" x1/2" in cross section and 6 feet long. They are bent around a constant radius over the last 2 feet or so.

Whilst in the flat state, some holes are drilled through the vanes. Once bent, the holes appear in the bent model at the correct angle.

The problem arises when we try to assemble things. Pro/E understands the holes in the unbent position. They only seem to exist in the bent position as surfaces. The bent holes have no axes and we therefore cannot assemble screws, etc. to them.

Any suggestions?

 

My suggestion was that he models them all again as solids, rather than as sheet metal, but that wasn't popular...

 

 

 

WF4, m220

 

 

 

John Wayman


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3 replies

1-Visitor
September 12, 2014

John,

What WF sheet metal techniqe was used to create the vanes? I have done some projects where I needed to assemble things to "bent and twisted" features.

Can you share a picture or a sample model?

Dean

1-Visitor
September 12, 2014

You can add points or coordinate systems to the holes in the flat state and they should follow the bent feature.

Not sure where the axes went. Do they not appear in the flat state?

The problem you are seeing is because the holes are no longer round after being formed. This is because in sheetmetal only one surface drives all the sheetmetal geometry features - when that surface is warped or formed, all the features driven from it are warped as well. If a hole is in a place that stays flat after bending, it would still be a hole.

17-Peridot
September 13, 2014

I can get the axes to follow the bend back feature but the reference pattern fails to follow past the bend. It is a tedious assembly. Avoid trying to use tangent as it seems to always create the tangent opposite where you want it with no "next solution" available. As David recommends, you can place points at the intersect of a rounded plane (cylindrical) and the axis. Then you have an axis for alignment and a point for "depth". You will need that point in both features, though. CSYS might be better, but they too require a lot of "maintenance". Why can we not have a CSYS mate to a point as a constraint?

JWayman1-VisitorAuthor
1-Visitor
September 17, 2014

Thanks for the answers, folks.

I have just returned after a lovely long weekend in Rome, so I apologise for not having replied earlier, but I did have other things on my mind...

vane_sheet_metal.png

 

The picture shows the model tree and the bent item, with the hole axes marooned in free space.

I tried placing another set of axes, through a point and normal to the surface, before the bend feature, and got the same result, just with some additional marooned points.

I also tried doing the bend first, then an unbend before adding the holes and finally a bend-back. Still the same result.

Where are we going wrong?

 

We don't use sheet metal much - you probably guessed that. I'm sure I've cracked this one previously, though.

 

Any suggestions (other than to ditch WF4 and use Creo Parametric 3.0...)?

 

WF4, m220

 

Cheers,

 

 

John

17-Peridot
September 17, 2014

John, I've had axes do both things... stay on the flat position in some instances and others it would go with the metal. The axes should be created with the feature and maybe they are hiding with intelligent layers.

This is Creo 2.0. You can probably follow the structure. You also see that the axes moved with the bend-back.

However, opening this part today, the points I placed at the intersections of axis and surface moved off to a projected state from the flat until I edited the definision of the points. Bad form!

smt_pattern_axes.PNG

I guess I better report this one.

point_error.PNG

1-Visitor
September 17, 2014

Can we all agree that it performs to spec?