Nice job and helps a new to CAD maker. This might be out of the scope of your training syllabus however I am trying to make a pin that is pointed and has serrations along its shaft. These are used in some assemblies in lieu of screws and are made of TPU or Nylon.
Send me a pic of what you are kinda looking for even if it’s just a rough sketch and I can do a step by step tutorial. I think revolving it would be the best way from the description given but let me know at mesamakes209@gmail.com
Question: 2 circles non of them yet constrained. I select the concetric tool which one of the 2 cirlces will move? Is it the one i click first, orthe smaller into the bigger? I tried do not come to a conclusion.
It looks like it’s a left to right thing the one closer to the left side of the screen is like the anchor point if nothing else is fixed and all geometry is just free floating with no dimensions. If I give a dimension of x” from the origin then the other circle will move to the one that is more defined (not always fully defined)…… hope this helps
Nice job and helps a new to CAD maker. This might be out of the scope of your training syllabus however I am trying to make a pin that is pointed and has serrations along its shaft. These are used in some assemblies in lieu of screws and are made of TPU or Nylon.
Send me a pic of what you are kinda looking for even if it’s just a rough sketch and I can do a step by step tutorial. I think revolving it would be the best way from the description given but let me know at mesamakes209@gmail.com
Question: 2 circles non of them yet constrained. I select the concetric tool which one of the 2 cirlces will move? Is it the one i click first, orthe smaller into the bigger? I tried do not come to a conclusion.
It looks like it’s a left to right thing the one closer to the left side of the screen is like the anchor point if nothing else is fixed and all geometry is just free floating with no dimensions. If I give a dimension of x” from the origin then the other circle will move to the one that is more defined (not always fully defined)…… hope this helps