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Involute Curve in NX 9

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Kim K

Mechanical
Jun 29, 2017
6
Hi! I have gotten access to a file "involute_curve.prt" and was wondering if you could help figure out how to change it. I am unsure what 't' represents. I am fairly certain 'r' is my generating radius. Can you help? Please and thank you! - Kim
 
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Don't mess with the 't' expression! It's value in under the control of the Curve function.

John R. Baker, P.E. (ret)
EX-Product 'Evangelist'
Irvine, CA
Siemens PLM:
UG/NX Museum:

The secret of life is not finding someone to live with
It's finding someone you can't live without
 
The involute curve is a parametric equation (a "law curve" in NX terminology). The "t" is the parameter that ranges from the value of 0 to 1 that helps drive the curve definition. The "t" must appear in the equation for the curve, but as JohnRBaker points out, it is under the control of NX.

www.nxjournaling.com
 
Ok - T expression untouched! :)

Why can't i use the extrude function and have this involute as the driving curve to build it?
 
Yes, invalid string.

I had used the part file as a linked composite curve and it failed. So I went into the part itself and chose the law curve and it had the same error.
 
I am using NX 9 and can not open that file SDETERS.
 
That was a limitation which I personally found and reported as a PR, and which I was under the impression that this was fixed in either NX 10.0 or NX 11.0

John R. Baker, P.E. (ret)
EX-Product 'Evangelist'
Irvine, CA
Siemens PLM:
UG/NX Museum:

The secret of life is not finding someone to live with
It's finding someone you can't live without
 
Thank you for all the input!!! After the holiday I will be looking into this further to see if the involute part i downloaded can actually work with what we are designing! :)
 
If the Law Curve approach isn't working, there is an alternative. If you look in some location like C:\Program Files\Siemens\NX 10.0\UGOPEN\SNAP\Examples\More Examples\Gear on your system, you will find a SNAP program that creates simple spur gears. Part of this is the construction of an involute curve.
 
Try change the start angle from 0 to say, 0.1 or 1 or ...
It will probably do the trick, if you can accept it.

Regards,
Tomas
 
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