Joeydee,
Please correct me if I am wrong, but I believe that you are trying to relate the complexity of building tooling based on the complexity of the surface data. If this is true, your idea could have alot of benefit to many tools shops and manufacturers. Just a note.
catiatrain
What about 3D MinMax option available in Surfacic Curvature Analysis?
This could give you an overall MinMax value that could be used (for example) to classify the complexity of a draw die section.
catiatrain
TheMan51,
Here is a brief tutorial that I created using IgniteCAST.com that should answer your question.
http://www.ignitecast.com/switchboard.seam?linktype=show_ignitable&ign_value=mfrhHxKph80%3D&runmode=1
Cheers,
catiatrain
CATPart,
This is probably the easiest way to create an Isometric View containing a breakout section using the Drafting Workbench.
The link to the Ignitable is the following:
http://www.ignitecast.com/switchboard.seam?linktype=show_ignitable&ign_value=M9Z1j51jFpc%3D&runmode=1
These tutorials...
Jackk / Thixoguy
Thanks for complements.
I used Ignite to create the tutorial. It is free a free download when you create a free account at www.IgniteCAST.com.
I created the tutorial in about 10min and I am not kidding.
Try it out it is easy.
As for the Question, what exactly do think he is...
Hi Damir,
I created an Ignitable with www.ignitecast.com to show you how to create a section cut through an Isometric View similar to ProE.
http://www.ignitecast.com/switchboard.seam?linktype=show_ignitable&ign_value=LdSnGbBzP1Y%3D&runmode=1
I hope this helps.
Sincerely,
CATIATRAIN
Hi,
Ashvanth is correct.
Please view the following tutorial I created using www.ignitecast.com. It will show you step be step how to join a surface without a split line.
http://www.ignitecast.com/switchboard.seam?linktype=show_ignitable&ign_value=DXWMrjgY1yA%3D&runmode=1
Thanks
CATIATRAIN