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Mark paint free area on sheet metal part

chshasa1
11-Garnet

Mark paint free area on sheet metal part

Hi All

 

i want to mark an area in my sheet metal plate, were painting is forbidden.

 

how can i do that without using cut out (extrude) function within the sheet metal design?

in the picture, you can see an already marked are, unfortunately, this are solid models and have therefore no feature tree anymore to check.

i want to do the second area on the counter part of this.

 

 

 

Feel the magic
1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions

@BenLoosli @pausob @kdirth @StephenW @tbraxton 

 

i draw a sketch and then used the designated are function. 

paintfree_solution.PNG

 is this a possible solution to keep it like this or do you see any problem which might occur in the future?

BR

Feel the magic

View solution in original post

7 REPLIES 7
tbraxton
21-Topaz II
(To:chshasa1)

One option is to use a cosmetic sketch feature for the masked area.

 

https://support.ptc.com/help/creo/creo_pma/r9.0/usascii/index.html#page/part_modeling/part_modeling/About_Cosmetic_Sketches.html 

========================================
Involute Development, LLC
Consulting Engineers
Specialists in Creo Parametric
StephenW
23-Emerald II
(To:chshasa1)

I'm not sure I completely understand your question but what I would do is either use a sketch feature to define an area (you can add x-hatch to a closed sketch) or use a surface feature to show an area.

kdirth
20-Turquoise
(To:chshasa1)

I would suggest a projected sketch, to define the area, as it will follow the unfolding of the part.


There is always more to learn in Creo.

If you are using Creo 9, then it is very easy - use the divide surface functionality.

About Divide Surface 

 

If you still use older versions, then others have pointed out the work-around already.

BenLoosli
23-Emerald II
(To:pausob)

Divide a surface may not be the best tool to only 'mark' an area for masking. You still want the body to be a single body with surfaces. You only want to add a sketch outline with hatching as an area marking for no paint or whatever surface treatment is being applied.

A separate body with a .0005 thickness would be another way to do it, but the hatching within a sketch seems the most reasonable method.

@BenLoosli @pausob @kdirth @StephenW @tbraxton 

 

i draw a sketch and then used the designated are function. 

paintfree_solution.PNG

 is this a possible solution to keep it like this or do you see any problem which might occur in the future?

BR

Feel the magic
kdirth
20-Turquoise
(To:chshasa1)

I have not used (or even noticed) that tool.  However, after looking at the documentation and giving it a try, it seems to be a good option for what you are trying to do.  For me, I will probably start using it for pad printed and screen printed symbols on parts.


There is always more to learn in Creo.
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