cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Community Tip - New to the community? Learn how to post a question and get help from PTC and industry experts! X

Pro/E WF2.0: Datum Curve: Variable pitch helical spring

anup.more
1-Newbie

Pro/E WF2.0: Datum Curve: Variable pitch helical spring

Hi,



How can you make a helical spring with variable pitch values through
datum curves command? Is it possible? If yes, then what will be the
equations..??





Thanking you in advance

Anup More

Engineer- CAD

Emerson Climate Technologies (India) Limited




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.
4 REPLIES 4

Hi,



How can you make a helical spring with variable pitch values through
datum curves command? Is it possible? If yes, then what will be the
equations..??





Thanking you in advance

Anup More

Engineer- CAD

Emerson Climate Technologies (India) Limited



Hi,



This has reference to the mail below.

I'm sending you the attachment of the required spring type.





Anup More | T +91 2164 241 413 (2126) | M +91 9767 899 779


Create a datum curve described an equation. Choose the coordinate system
and choose Cylindrical as the type. Then have an equation like

! setting the radius of the helical spring
r = 5
! setting the spring to have 10 turns of 360º
theta = t*360*10
! setting the pitch of the spring so that the spring starts 1 mm from the
xy plane, ends 3 mm from the xy plane with an increasing pitch (first turn
is at z = 1.02, second turn at 1.08, third turn at 1.18, etc. You can
write any equation in here to get the pitch you want.
z = 1 + 2*t^2



Note that 't' is a ProE variable is equal to 0 at the start of the curve
and 1 at the end. At least one of the equations has to be written in terms
of 't'.
--
Mark von Huben




|------------>
| From: |
|------------>
mbrockman
6-Contributor
(To:anup.more)

Anup,
been awhile since I've worked in wf2. in wf3 you can get the spring quite easily
with a variable helical sweep feature and choosing the pitch to be variable.

here is a sample image and part

Mark
Top Tags