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Sheet metal
joseph_terpend
Member Posts: 17 ✭
2 Things I would like to be able to do in ONshape. Sheet metal Cylinders and square to round sheet metal lofts.
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Square to round is not a developable surface, so strictly speaking, is not a sheet metal functionality. How do you use it? What really happens when it is being manufactured?
Using a roll form machine in sheet metal is also very common, the simplest form is a cylinder but shapes can also be made with varying radi and I have the need to the incorporate this with sheet metal bends. Here's an example of a part I'd like to unfold with rolls and bends.
Twitter: @onshapetricks & @babart1977
Thank you for your example. This one I understand - all the surfaces here are either plane or rolled + bends between them. It is clear how to unfold them into a flat. In case of arc to line loft there is no clear unfolding rule. I'd like to understand manufacturing process for such a model in order to choose the best approximation for unfolding. Your answer in the other thread suggests a possible approach: approximating loft with piece-wise flat surface. This would nicely correspond to a multiple bends manufacturing process. I'd like to understand if this is the manufacturing process normally used for such models.
I've done this in the past manually as an approximation. It takes a lot of steps to accomplish. There is also a bit of fudging involved in cleaning up ends. Notice that each bend is a different angle. When bent on a break it will stretch enough to come out looking pretty good and will fit well. OS has difficulty anytime there is a need to overlap a bend or particularly where bends need a partial trim. I sure was pleased with Solid Edge being able to do an approximation some time back since I was doing a lot of these at the time. Used to get even more fuzzy when there was a need for floating liners offset 4 or 6" inside of the main casing.
More facets will make a closer approximation.
https://cad.onshape.com/documents/6a5c2de10f77d28fb601c807/w/7a62351c650a26704e6c30a2/e/6ec37f399d00551edfbcf861
Twitter: @BryanLAGdesign
Twitter: @BryanLAGdesign
You don't actually need so many steps: you can loft directly from lines to a point to create a planar surfaces that will work for sure with a "thicken" sheet metal:
EDIT: improved the model a bit, note that you can trim the corner of the surface before creating the sheet metal model to cleanup the corner. Using the polygon tool and box selection it's pretty quick to create such a model:
https://cad.onshape.com/documents/43ef7c2dd3d6ab133a50258b/w/c817829a385222a6fee70df5/e/69849f7270e935ecf6471a5b
I just scrolled up further and looked at @NeilCooke's example and that's actually pretty simple... the trick to thicken lofted sheet surfaces for sheet metal is making sure the faces are actually planar.