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Friday Spiral stumper

JeffS.
1-Visitor

Friday Spiral stumper

OK group,

I have a model that is giving me fits. I want to make a plate with a
spiral cut. I have attached a jpeg example. The spiral cut uses a sweep
with a sketched datum created by equation.





Here is the curve equation:
r=.01+t*(.65-.01)
theta=t*360*33
z=.0505

The plate is 0.04 thick and 0.84 by 0.99 with 2 x 0.125 dia holes.

As soon as the cut intersects open features it begins to fail. Anyone
have any ideas?

I am on WF2 , but am open to solutions with WF4 as well.

I can send a part file if anyone is interested.

Regards,
Jeff

Jeff Schnellinger
Senior Mechanical Engineer
jeff.schnellinger@kistler.com
This thread is inactive and closed by the PTC Community Management Team. If you would like to provide a reply and re-open this thread, please notify the moderator and reference the thread. You may also use "Start a topic" button to ask a new question. Please be sure to include what version of the PTC product you are using so another community member knowledgeable about your version may be able to assist.
7 REPLIES 7

Can you reorder the spiral cut before the .125 diameter holes?


Timothy

Might have to make the part bigger to accommodate the entire spiral and
then cut off the excess.

Seems like a bad idea, but I have seen worse situations when I have opened
other individuals parts.

Brian S. Lynn
Technical Coordinator, Product Engineering

Looking into it a little bit, It seem to be an accuracy issue. The tighter the accuracy the more "grooves" I could see.

Timothy

Create the spiral as a surface/quilt. Then solidify the quilt as a cut.
JeffS.
1-Visitor
(To:JeffS.)

Group,

Thanks for the many helpful replies. I got many suggestions to re-order
the holes, but unfortunately, this does not change the issue.

Here are some more observations:

As long as the spiral is fully inside the part and not intersecting a
hole, it works fine. However, adding a cut to remove excess material
always fails.

As long as a hole is smaller than three individual 'spirals', it passes
through the holes just fine.

So it seems as the spiral has difficulty when encountering many
intersections.

I also dialed accuracy to the minimum I could ( 0.00001) and it made no
difference

I also got many replies to make a surface and then solidify to make the
cut. I have not tried that, but will give it a go.

Thanks for all the speedy help.

Regards,
Jeff

Jeff Schnellinger
Senior Mechanical Engineer
jeff.schnellinger@kistler.com

Hi Jeff,

I also recently noticed a similar problem in SolidWorks when creating a helical sweep cut in a cylindrical part. I needed to cut some flats along the top & bottom of a cylinder where the spiral cut represented the screw threads, and the flat removes the threads in that area. The spiral cut was failing when it intersected the cut-out for the flats. Reordering the features allowed the helical sweep cut to work, but the cut-out for the flat itself failed after the features were re-ordered.

So from reading your message, I suspect this problem is common along multiple CAD platforms (at least for Pro-E & SW), and is not limited to Pro-E. If I can find a method to solve this problem with the part model in SW, I would think a similar technique should also work in Pro-E as well.

Regards,

Chris Thompson

www.appianwaytech.com


In Reply to Jeff Schnellinger:

Group,

Thanks for the many helpful replies. I got many suggestions to re-order
the holes, but unfortunately, this does not change the issue.

Here are some more observations:

As long as the spiral is fully inside the part and not intersecting a
hole, it works fine. However, adding a cut to remove excess material
always fails.

As long as a hole is smaller than three individual 'spirals', it passes
through the holes just fine.

So it seems as the spiral has difficulty when encountering many
intersections.

I also dialed accuracy to the minimum I could ( 0.00001) and it made no
difference

I also got many replies to make a surface and then solidify to make the
cut. I have not tried that, but will give it a go.

Thanks for all the speedy help.

Regards,
Jeff

Jeff Schnellinger
Senior Mechanical Engineer
jeff.schnellinger@kistler.com

Using Gerry's advice, I believe I found a solution and the solution is similar for both Pro-E & SolidWorks when creating a spiral / helical cut. From the attached JPEG files, I created an external sketch (before the spiral cut) of the excess material to be cut-away, and then created an extruded surface after the spiral / helical cut. To cut-away the excess material, select the cutting surface and "Solidify" (Edit --> Solidify). Be sure to select the remove material option and direction in the solidify feature.

In SolidWorks, it is basically the same produce except that you use "Cut with Surface" in-place of "Solidify" (Pro-E). Also, when working with surfaces, let the surface extend beyond the edge of the solid part in-order to successfully cut-away the excess material. The attached images should be sufficient to guide you through the process.

Regards,

Chris Thompson

www.appianwaytech.com


In Reply to Gerry Champoux:

Create the spiral as a surface/quilt. Then solidify the quilt as a cut.
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