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16-Pearl
September 22, 2015
Question

How to create a triangular surface patch without wrinkle

  • September 22, 2015
  • 5 replies
  • 9877 views

Hi, I am facing an issue here when I try to add a triangular patch to my quilt. If I create the patch using boundary blend (2+1 curves), the resultant surface will have a wrinkled tip which will then prevent me from the subsequent thickness offset. Any good way to create a nice wrinkle free surface for this ? I attached my part file here for your reference. Thanks.

5 replies

13-Aquamarine
September 22, 2015

When I create this patch, I don't necessarily get "wrinkles" but I think I see what you mean.

Assuming you cannot alter the tangency settings of the surface, the best option is not to use a boundary blend at all. I already tried messing with the tangency and it doesn't help. The patch just fails. So instead, branch out and try something new... a Style surface.

A style surface offers several options not available with a typical boundary blend. You can generate the surface and then partition and edit it to tweak it until it's in the precise shape you need. I was able to create a Style surface without a wrinkle and then offset it nicely. Surfacing using the style menu is far beyond what I can explain in a post but I'll give you the general steps.

Select Style from the Model-->Surfaces tab. Select Surface from the style menu. Choose all 3 edges of your triangle and select the check mark to complete the feature. This will create a basic triangular patch. You can subdivide the patch by selecting Surface Edit and then adding to the Max Rows and Max Columns.

This is the most basic possible set of options for a style surface. Hopefully, this gives you enough to start with. You can investigate other style options further to help you develop high quality surfaces patches and use them as the basis for downstream geometry,

Good luck!

-Brian

BHOoi16-PearlAuthor
16-Pearl
September 22, 2015

Thanks, Brian.

In this case (using style), how do i control the tangency of the surface along its 2 curves lying on RIGHT and TOP planes ? I want the surface to be NORMAL to its curve planes. Thankstriangle.JPG

kdirth
21-Topaz I
21-Topaz I
September 22, 2015

You cannot with the current sketches.  To make the edge of a surface normal to a plane all the lines intersecting the plane need to be normal.  Your sketches are not normal to either plane.

There is always more to learn.
1-Visitor
September 22, 2015

In case you have not purchased the style (ISDX) extension, you can still do it with the basic package with boundary blend as follow:

trimming your first boundary blend (the 3 sided one)

Create a second boundary blend (4 sided) :

You can see the procedure with the file enclosed

3 sided trim boundary blend.png

3 sided trim boundary blend.png

3 sided zebra stripes - Creo Parametric.png

BHOoi16-PearlAuthor
16-Pearl
September 22, 2015

This resultant surface looks great, except that it looks a bit "patchy". Any way to get rid of those boundary lines of 2nd blended surface ? Thanks

1-Visitor
September 22, 2015

You mean in the display ? If yes go in "shading mode" instead of "shading with edges".

Unless your part is going to be a highly glossy surface (for ex a car body) I wouldn't worry about the transition being visible.

In most of the applications (matte / non glossy surface), tangent continuous surfaces are enough (you rarely need to go to curvature continuity).

1-Visitor
September 23, 2015

I think there's a deeper issue than what we discussed: if the surface needs to be normal to one of the planes, then the edge you are using to construct the "triangle patch tip" must be normal to said plane too. Sketch 3 curve is not normal to TOP plane, and the same goes for the other sketch.

With the current sketches you chose sketch 3 and sketch 4 as first direction boundary blends, and that's the issue. If you want the surface to flow better (forget normal as we already saw it's not possible with current sketches) just use sketch 4 and the boundary edge for first direction, with tangent, then sketch 3 as second direction, this should be much smoother

BHOoi16-PearlAuthor
16-Pearl
September 23, 2015

I think I have got another workaround here, quite similar to ccanales's suggestion. See below and attached proe file. With this I am able to get rid of the bad geometry at its tip thus allow me to offset it better. What do you guys think ?

triangle.JPG

1-Visitor
October 2, 2015

Perhaps you have a purpose or reason for it, but I think you started off badly by making the two main boundary curves from two sketched curves tangent to each other. Also, the technique of utilizing the extruded surface to get 4 boundaries is fairly clever, it could, depending on the geometry along that side, result in a less than perfect edge, if you zoom up on the edge of the surface it isn't aligned with the curve that is probably intended to be the edge of the surface. Of course, if this surface is going to be the base surface and other surfaces will align to it, you might be okay with that resulting edge being where it is, rather than where the curve is.

BHOoi16-PearlAuthor
16-Pearl
October 3, 2015

Thanks for pointing out the surface edge and original curve matching issue. One thing I have done to improve the matching is to have standalone section for my extruded surface. I can then tweak the section till the resultant surface edge matches with the original curve pretty well.  See below:

Capture.JPG

It's pretty manual work, and if there is more engineering way to align then would be good.

1-Visitor
October 3, 2015

The better approach is to overbuild a little, along the lines of what you did, but within the intended surface, not outside of it. You can create the three sided surface using the vertex at that pointed corner, trim it out so you have four sides for the final surface, or bring that first surface up a little closer to the sharp corner, trim it out so you have four boundaries for the final surface.