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Drafts are defined on molded parts
to make them easier to remove from molds.
There are two ways of determining the objects
to draft: either by explicitly selecting the object or by selecting the
neutral element, which makes the application detect the appropriate faces
to use.
This task shows you how to create a basic draft by selecting the neutral
element. |
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Open the
Draft2.CATPart document. |
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Click Draft Angle
.
The Draft Definition dialog box is displayed
and an arrow appears on a plane, indicating the default pulling
direction. The constant angle draft option
is activated. If you click the icon to the right
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you then access the command for creating
variable angle drafts.
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Check Selection by neutral face to determine
the selection mode.
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Select the upper face as the neutral element. This
selection allows the application to detect the face to be drafted.
The neutral element is now displayed in blue, the neutral curve is in
pink. The faces to be drafted are in dark red.
Pulling Direction
The pulling direction is now displayed on top of the part. It is normal to
the neutral face.
The Controlled by reference
option is now activated, meaning that whenever you will edit the element
defining the pulling direction, you will modify the draft accordingly.
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Note that when using the other selection mode
(explicit selection), the selected objects are displayed in dark pink. |
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The default angle value is 5. Enter 7 degrees as the new
angle value.
The application displays the new angle value in the geometry.
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click Preview to see the
draft to be created.
It appears in blue.
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Click More to access additional options.
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To know how to use the options Parting Element
and Draft Form, see Creating
Drafts with Parting Elements. |
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Limiting Elements
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Click the Limiting Elements
field. While drafting a
face, you can limit it by selecting one or more faces or planes that
intersect it completely.
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Select Plane.1 as the limiting
element.
The arrow points to the portion of material to be kept to perform the
operation.
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Select Plane.2 as the second limiting element.
Note that the number of limiting elements you select is indicated in the
dialog box, just in front of the Limiting Elements field.
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Click the arrow to reverse its direction, and therefore
retain the opposite side of the feature.
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When using several limiting elements, make sure
that they do not intersect on the face to be drafted. |
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Contextual commands creating the limiting elements you need are available
from the Limiting Elements field:
- Create Plane: for more information, see
Creating Planes
- XY Plane: the XY plane of the current coordinate system
origin (0,0,0) becomes the limiting element.
- YZ Plane: the YZ plane of the current coordinate system
origin (0,0,0) becomes the limiting element.
- ZX Plane: the ZX plane of the current coordinate system
origin (0,0,0) becomes the limiting element.
If you create any of these elements, the application then displays the
corresponding icon next to Limiting Elements. Clicking this icon
enables you to edit the element. |
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Click OK to confirm the operation.
The faces are drafted but the part areas included between both limiting
planes have not been modified, as specified through the limiting element
option.
Draft Definition Dialog Box
The characteristic elements are:
- pulling direction: this direction corresponds to the
reference from which the draft faces are defined.
- draft angle : this is the angle that the draft faces make
with the pulling direction. This angle may be defined for each face.
- parting element : this plane, face or surface cuts the
part in two and each portion is drafted according to its previously
defined direction. For an example, see
Creating Drafts with Parting Elements.
- neutral element : this element defines a neutral curve on
which the drafted face will lie. This element will remain the same during
the draft. The neutral element and parting element may be the same
element, as shown in Creating Drafts with
Parting Elements.
- Propagation can be set to:
- None: there is no propagation
- Smooth: the application integrates the faces
propagated in tangency onto the neutral face to define the neutral
element.
For more about the neutral element, see
A Few Notes about Drafts. |
- The
icon available after the Faces
to draft field lets you edit the list of the faces to be drafted. For
more information about that capability, refer to
Editing a List of Elements.
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Editing Drafts
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- You can transform a constant angle draft into a variable angle draft.
To do so, double-click your draft, then click the variable angle draft
option
in the dialog box to access the appropriate options. For more
information, refer to Creating Variable Angle
Drafts.
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Neutral Elements
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Draft Definition |
Result |
- We recommend you use a neutral element intersecting the faces to be
drafted. However, in some cases, you can use
neutral elements that do not intersect the faces. This is possible if the
neutral element is made of only one face. This is an example of what you
can get:
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Draft Definition |
Result |
- If the neutral element does not belong to the body which faces you
want to draft, it then needs to be large enough to fully intersect those
faces.
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Methodology
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- If you need to draft several faces using a pulling direction normal
to the neutral element, keep in mind the following operating mode that
will facilitate your design:
- Click
and first select the neutral element of your choice. The pulling
direction that appears is then normal to the neutral element. Select
the face to be drafted and click OK to create your first
draft.
- Now, to create the other drafts in the same CATPart document, note
that by default the application uses the same pulling direction as the
one specified for creating your first draft. As designers usually use a
unique pulling direction, you do not need to redefine your pulling
direction.
- If you perform a difficult drafting, for example if you obtain
twisted faces, use the Deactivate and Extract Geometry
commands to solve your difficulties. For more information, refer to
Extracting Geometry.
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