Thanks for the video. In Creo, you do not have to have a 'curve' first for a Sweep. Start the Sweep operation then Pick 'Datum' > 'Sketch' on the right side of ribbon and sketch your trajectory, then you can sketch the section that will sweep. Using this option will imbed the sketch into the Sweep feature and hide its visibility in one action. This is also true for Swept Blend. Sets in Rounds and Chamfers help with building transitions between highly complex rounds
Hey Jon! Thanks for pointing it out. Ever since I moved from ProE, I haven’t used the datum sketch option to the right much on inside sweep or blend feature.
I think this tip highlights how unbelievably not intuitive and useless the interface is, especially for beginners. Out of the thousands of Creo users I have met and talked to, you are the only one that knew this fact.
Make series on creo mechanism and simulation from basic to advance one by one ....vedios are good but beginner can get confuse because of random topics
Thanks for the video. In Creo, you do not have to have a 'curve' first for a Sweep. Start the Sweep operation then Pick 'Datum' > 'Sketch' on the right side of ribbon and sketch your trajectory, then you can sketch the section that will sweep. Using this option will imbed the sketch into the Sweep feature and hide its visibility in one action. This is also true for Swept Blend. Sets in Rounds and Chamfers help with building transitions between highly complex rounds
Hey Jon! Thanks for pointing it out. Ever since I moved from ProE, I haven’t used the datum sketch option to the right much on inside sweep or blend feature.
I think this tip highlights how unbelievably not intuitive and useless the interface is, especially for beginners. Out of the thousands of Creo users I have met and talked to, you are the only one that knew this fact.
Make series on creo mechanism and simulation from basic to advance one by one ....vedios are good but beginner can get confuse because of random topics
Thanks for your suggestion.