by bigtodd » Thu Oct 30, 2008 11:27 am
One other thing is you may be trying to do too much at one time. Remember that a solid model is actually a surface model that has been joined together to leave no holes or gaps. Solid functions are actually creating surfaces and capping the ends for you automatically. It does what you tell it to do. When it does not give you the result you expect then you did not give it enough controls to give you what you want.
If the commands you are using do not give you what you want you will have to try to create things in smaller steps. You will have to work with surfaces individually and then join or stitch them all back together again at the end to form the solid. It takes a little longer but you get what you want.
When I teach advanced surfacing in CAD I use the old tale. "How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time."
Just make sure you are taking to big of a bite when you are trying to model something.
Todd
One other thing is you may be trying to do too much at one time. Remember that a solid model is actually a surface model that has been joined together to leave no holes or gaps. Solid functions are actually creating surfaces and capping the ends for you automatically. It does what you tell it to do. When it does not give you the result you expect then you did not give it enough controls to give you what you want.
If the commands you are using do not give you what you want you will have to try to create things in smaller steps. You will have to work with surfaces individually and then join or stitch them all back together again at the end to form the solid. It takes a little longer but you get what you want.
When I teach advanced surfacing in CAD I use the old tale. "How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time."
Just make sure you are taking to big of a bite when you are trying to model something.
Todd