Is there a way to subtract one solid body from another, but still retain both bodies? I would like to use the features on the first body to create a hole in the second body, without loosing the original body. The way I do this now is by making a dummy copy of the first body, that ultimately gets deleted when I use the subtract feature. It works, but seems a bit kludgy.
@@with-aryan Hi Aryan, thanks for the reply, I need the thread from another part being used to the part I design, I tried with combine and substract, looks like it's good, how are you ? cheers :)
Thanks this was very useful for me. Your presentation is very direct and efficient. So many other SW videos are useless. They are "too long", "fumbling clicks" or "bad english". I will check out the rest of your tutorials. Keep on.
what if we want to retain, some bodies after subtraction. subtract totally removes the body, but if we want to split up into two different solids, how to do ?
Is there a clever way to create a nice imprint with one body to another. Basically submerging the red body completely inside the green body... but in a way that enables you to physically place the red body into the green body if you were to 3D print it for example. Like a nice little exact fitting box for the red body. And to allow for some wiggle room... walls must be a little further away from the part and and shafts must be created smaller in order for the red body to fit in.
سلام آقا رایان تو دیوانه ای ... !! دیوانه ی آموزش دادن با روشی شوخ و دیوانه وار ... (هر چند من زیاد انگلیسی حالیم نمیشه و زیرنویس هات کمکم میکنه) ... و میخوام اینو بدونی که من عاشق این روش تدریستم.
I have a great webinar that is free and you can watch it here bit.ly/SolidWorksCourseProForBeginners
I've been searching for a week for this explanation. I've been trying to use cavities but that's way to hard, this is so much better. Thanks!!
You need way more subscribers this is gold, entertaining, concise, helpful. This is such an underrated quality on TH-cam
Thank you! As long as a handful few like you learn sth though this, I'm happy. Also don't miss this bit.ly/SolidWorksCourseProForBeginners
You're actually a hero
I have a problem that combine is hidden in the program and does not appear active. What is the problem?
You only have one solid body. To use combine you’ll need at leastleast two
audio is amazing. Love this
Glad you like it!
Is there a way to subtract one solid body from another, but still retain both bodies? I would like to use the features on the first body to create a hole in the second body, without loosing the original body. The way I do this now is by making a dummy copy of the first body, that ultimately gets deleted when I use the subtract feature. It works, but seems a bit kludgy.
Feature: Deform
Thanks, Ryan! I will try this!
Fantastic way of teaching :D
Glad you liked it
Is it possible to cut with both bodies, keep them and only subtract the parts touching?
use Move/copy body to duplicate it first, then do it. But the correct way would be to use DEFORM which is a feature
indent could also work
VERY HELPFUL VID ! Thanks.
Glad it was helpful!
Are these two parts in an assembly? I only have one 'part' in a part at a time?
no. in the part mode.That's the point
@@with-aryan That's why I was asking - in part mode for me the Combine option is greyed out... I did it in assembly mode and then saved as a part.
ma brother i like you and your fkn tutorials thanks for evrything 🤝
Thank you for the kind words.
Thanks. Easy to understand and interesting gestures.
Glad it was helpful!
That body to keep message doesn't appear for me where can i find it
I cannot find the Combine command. Neither with the search option or the insert feature option..
go to insert, features and find it there
Nice info, how can we extract that combine to another part ? thanks :)
Combine is not ideal for that, you have to use Indent
@@with-aryan Ok, I give a try, how can we get the right thread from extracted part to my designed part ? thanks
@@RixtronixLAB what do you mean the "right" thread?
@@with-aryan Hi Aryan, thanks for the reply, I need the thread from another part being used to the part I design, I tried with combine and substract, looks like it's good, how are you ? cheers :)
Great video, thank you for producing. BTW is there a way to keep the "cutter" bodies?
Indent! you should use that instead.
Thanks this was very useful for me. Your presentation is very direct and efficient. So many other SW videos are useless. They are "too long", "fumbling clicks" or "bad english". I will check out the rest of your tutorials. Keep on.
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you very much bro..
any time man
Help me!! I can't open dialogue box keep body.
fee for your online course???
too lazy to check it out? ;) $997 courses.solidworkstutorials.net/Webinar-Registration?sl=miniseries
this really helped me ty
You are very welcome Darren. Make sure to check my course and see if that's for you
i loved the way you explain....
Your the best thank you so much.
Glad it helped
@@with-aryan helped is an understatement you are a literal lifesaver thank you so much ❤️
very nice, thank you!
Thank you too!
what if we want to retain, some bodies after subtraction. subtract totally removes the body, but if we want to split up into two different solids, how to do ?
copy it first, then do that, that's the quick work-around. The main way would be to use deform
nice video, pura vida
you are welcome
Thanks bro
My pleasure.
Sir how do u make one part into another... I want to substrate a circular cylinder with protrusion from a solid box.... Can you please guild me
th-cam.com/video/J8BuDsPxCLw/w-d-xo.html&lc=UgxF52VCGO7mi7H3dpp4AaABAg
Is there a clever way to create a nice imprint with one body to another. Basically submerging the red body completely inside the green body... but in a way that enables you to physically place the red body into the green body if you were to 3D print it for example.
Like a nice little exact fitting box for the red body.
And to allow for some wiggle room... walls must be a little further away from the part and and shafts must be created smaller in order for the red body to fit in.
Your gonna have to use the same technique and use extruded cut (if applicable) to create an openning. It is a case dependent question
I forget to call them solid bodies too. :/
You and me both
سلام آقا رایان
تو دیوانه ای ... !!
دیوانه ی آموزش دادن با روشی شوخ و دیوانه وار ... (هر چند من زیاد انگلیسی حالیم نمیشه و زیرنویس هات کمکم میکنه) ... و میخوام اینو بدونی که من عاشق این روش تدریستم.
eradat
What is meant by boolean geometry, could you educate on it :)
what do you mean?
me loving. 😍
I shocked at 100% volume lmao
sorry lol
Hi bro I am from India i have small doubt
Me likey!
Just get to the point and speak clearly
audio is terrible. stop yelling
Apologies
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Watch my 2020 SolidWorks Beginner Free Webinar Course► courses.solidworkstutorials.net/Webinar-Registration?YT&
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درود بر فارسی زبان
Stop yelling. Adds no value.