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Does Creo have a way to use two perpendicular sketches to create a part? The attached image shows the two sketches, and the final image shows what I'm looking for. I created the final part by making an extrusion, then by making an extruded cut.
I have some complex geometry on a part where it would be easier to have creo simply use the two sketches to find the intersecting geometry and create a part in one step. I swear I've done this before, but can't seem to figure out how to do it now.
Thanks in advance.
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I created a subroutine UDF that works. You load the UDF, select one sketch, select the other sketch, and you're done. It creates two extrudes: one creates solid geometry, the other cuts it. I've never created or used these before so I don't have much advice. Take a look at this post.
This post is showing as a reply to LukaszMazur, but it was a reply to nsgoldberg's reply to me. But when I edit the post it says it's in reply to nsgoldberg? Khoros bug?
You can use the Intersect feature with those sketches to create a composite curve. But I don't think you can use that to fill the inside volume.
Have you tried a user-defined feature?
No, I'm not familiar with a user-defined feature. I'll have to check that out.
I tried intersect but couldn't find a way to make it a closed volume.
I created a subroutine UDF that works. You load the UDF, select one sketch, select the other sketch, and you're done. It creates two extrudes: one creates solid geometry, the other cuts it. I've never created or used these before so I don't have much advice. Take a look at this post.
This post is showing as a reply to LukaszMazur, but it was a reply to nsgoldberg's reply to me. But when I edit the post it says it's in reply to nsgoldberg? Khoros bug?
Thanks, at this point it seems easier to just create the two extrusions. I thought there would be an easier feature that combines the two, built into Creo, but I guess not. I know Solidworks does it, so perhaps I'm confusing doing this in Solidworks.
Again, thanks for all the help and suggestions everyone!
I'm having trouble understanding the problem. Why is doing this in one feature better than doing it in two? What are you trying to gain by it? The example obviously doesn't need this functionality.
You can generally get this effect by extruding the sketches as surfaces and then merging them. In Creo 7 we'll get multi body capabilities, so you'll be able to do it by extruding each of them and then combining them with an intersect. today you can do this if you make them as separate parts and merge them together.
I never found any real need to use things like this, however. What's the problem with just doing it with two extrudes?