![]() It would probably take me something like 20 to 30 hours of investigatory work to try and answer it any better than that. As to exactly why it works for the fillet surfaces on your pentagonal cases and not your hexagonal ones, that's probably some sort of bug in the fillet intersector. Well like I mentioned above when only some of the edges at a juncture area are being filleted it's a much more difficult case for the filleter to handle because it needs to do more work to extend and intersect fillet surfaces against each other. > pieces here! but it works for pentagonal ones! > I have a solution to my problem but I am just curious as to why fillet doesn't work for hexagonal I'm not able to repeat that over here, see my examples above where all edges are being targeted, fillet is working ok then.Ĭan you show me a case with your objects where it's not working when all the edges coming off of a single vertex location are being filleted instead of only some of them? 123D design allows users to easily create objects ready to 3D print. > Even when I select edges that are not coming from a shared vertex I don't get a fillet for this particular example! 123D Design is made by AutoDesk, the same company that creates the pro CAD tool AutoCad. If the pieces connect up to each other accurately enough then I'd recommend trying to delete faces that are overlapping and use Edit > Join to glue them together rather than boolean union which tries to intersect pieces. It can be difficult for booleans to handle pieces that barely graze each other with overlapping surface areas. Both of these programs are designed for being compatible with 3D printers and creating unique. Autodesk 123D Design is an application that runs in a Web-GL enabled web browser, an iPad and on a computer. but if you don't fillet them Boolean Union works. There are many similarities between 123D Design and SketchUp. > And one more thing when you select all hexagonal shapes and fillet them then you cannot Boolean Union I would recommend not to do it this way because it makes it more difficult for the filleter and doesn't work. > a face (just outer Hexagonal face) and try to fillet it I believe fillet won't work! ![]() > Important: I don't want the inner edges to have fillets (simply because they are not visible) So please select Over here if I select all hexagonal pieces they all can be filleted with a radius of 0.2: ![]() if you select other hexagonal pieces and try to perform fillet on them (let's say 0.2) you may not get a fillet!
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |