Welcome to the Onshape forum! Ask questions and join in the discussions about everything Onshape.

First time visiting? Here are some places to start:
  1. Looking for a certain topic? Check out the categories filter or use Search (upper right).
  2. Need support? Ask a question to our Community Support category.
  3. Please submit support tickets for bugs but you can request improvements in the Product Feedback category.
  4. Be respectful, on topic and if you see a problem, Flag it.

If you would like to contact our Community Manager personally, feel free to send a private message or an email.

Tangent Mate; part interference.

brian_dieckmanbrian_dieckman Member Posts: 7
Hello. I'm having some difficulty with the Tangent Mate feature; I'm hoping it's just user error.

In the Assembly below, the red part has a revolute mate to its pivot (which is Fastened to the origin). At the end of the red part is a lug that is meant to actuate the lever on the switch behind it (Outlined in yellow). That arm has a revolute mate to the black part surrounding it, and has a +/- 15° limit set.



What I've attempted is to use a Tangent Mate on the top face of the arm and the face of the lug. What happens is that the red part rotates until the top of the lug is tangent to the arm's face, causing the two parts to interfere.



It doesn't seem to matter what order I choose the faces nor where I click on the round lug... This geometry is always the result.

Before I go figuring out how to "cheat" this feature to make the interface I want, I thought I would check to see if there's a way to offset or re-arrange these faces in such a way as to retain the geometry as presented in the first screenshot.

Thanks for any help you can provide!

Comments

  • Alex_KempenAlex_Kempen Member Posts: 244 EDU
    I think you can just use a gear relation to make it so that when the red arm pivots, the grey lug pivots with it appropriately. This method should work pretty well, but it will require you to calculate the appropriate gear ratio between the two parts, which will depend on the radii of the red arm and the grey lug.
    CS Student at UT Dallas
    Alex.Kempen@utdallas.edu
    Check out my FeatureScripts here:



  • brian_dieckmanbrian_dieckman Member Posts: 7
    Ah a gear relation! Yes, I'll try that. Thanks for the tip.
  • brian_dieckmanbrian_dieckman Member Posts: 7
    It works! For some reason I was thinking a Gear Relation wouldn't work because the direction (in this case) would be opposite of a normal gear train. (Both gears spin the same direction in this case)



    The reverse checkbox did the trick. Thanks again!
  • shawn_crockershawn_crocker Member, OS Professional Posts: 798 PRO
    It seems like the tangent should have worked though. I have also had tangent mate do strange things. Tangent mate seems to function in a way that indicates it is sort of an afterthought feature. Like Onshape thought they could get away without it but added it in at the last minute. It's the one SolidWorks type feature that also functions just like SolidWorks (buggy)
  • brian_dieckmanbrian_dieckman Member Posts: 7
    One limitation of the tangent mate I hadn't thought of until now is that creating that mate would (I believe) fix the angle of contact between those two faces, meaning the part couldn't rotate as intended. I do think the gear mate is the right choice for this particular use case but I agree with you that the function is not intuitive.

    Extruded faces, in general, have poked a hole in my workflow a bit... in many cases where I believe I should be able to select a face, if that face is an extrusion of a curve, there doesn't seem to be an easy way (or any way, really) to use that face for other operations. (Loft/sweep/etc.)

    I'm new to Onshape so it's a bit of "how do I do this thing I used to do in sketchup/blender/etc in Onshape" and sometimes it just can't be done but overall, I'm finding Onshape to be suited to 99% of my use cases and I'm really enjoying learning.

    You guys are a part of that so I thank you all for your contributions!
  • tim_hess427tim_hess427 Member Posts: 648 ✭✭✭✭
    @brian_dieckman - regarding the angle of contact - it depends. If you make a cylindrical face (like a pin) tangent to a flat face, the pin will still be able to "rotate", but it'll have to stay "flat" against the face.

    So, the tangent mate should work in your example. To get your assembly working with the tangent mate - there should be an option to "reverse" the mate as well. I would make sure that the red pin is above the grey tab before applying the mate. It should help make sure things are aligned the first time. Others have pointed out that it is a bit of a flaky feature, but it is likely the "most correct" way to set up this assembly. You might just have to play around with the "reverse" arrows in the mate dialog to get things lined up right. 

    The gear relation, I think is a good approximation for small rotation angles in this specific case, but wouldn't work if the small grey part had to rotate through a larger angle (for example, if both parts rotated 90 degrees, they'd obviously not be in contact anymore). 


Sign In or Register to comment.