Using 3D Sketching Tools
Sketch Tools
Some of the tools you can use to create 3D sketches include: |
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Spline
on surface is only available in 3D. |
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You can not
use:
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3D Sketching
You can create 3D sketch entities on a working plane,
or at any arbitrary point in 3D space.
To begin a 3D sketch:
Click 3D
Sketch (Sketch toolbar) or Insert, 3D Sketch to open a 3D sketch on the
Front plane in Isometric
view.
- or -
Select a plane and then click 3D Sketch on Plane
(Sketch toolbar) or Insert,
3D Sketch on Plane to add a 3D
sketch in Normal to view.
Differences Between 2D and 3D Sketching
With 2D sketching, all geometry is projected onto the plane you selected
to sketch. Silhouette edges become planar entities, so that from certain
angles, fillets and cylinders appear as arcs and lines.
In the sketch below, though you do not view normal to the sketch plane,
you can still perceive how the model is projected onto the sketch plane.
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In a 2D sketch, model geometry is projected onto the sketch plane in
this manner. |
In the sketch below, the 3D sketch in red (created on one of the edges
of the chamfer) is a model edge that is not parallel to the 2D sketch
plane. The 2D sketch in red is a projection of the 3D sketch.
In the 2D sketch, you can sketch a line that is parallel to other lines
and add end points that are coincident. However, parallel and coincident
refer to the projected edge and not the real edge. The 2D sketch in blue
represents this condition. The end of the line is not
coincident with the real model edge, nor is the line parallel to it.
In 3D sketching, there are no such projections. If you add a parallel
relation to the red 3D sketch, it is parallel in 3D space.
In 3D sketches with nested contours, you
can select the internal boundaries, but their profiles are not subtracted
from the overall extrusion as is the case in 2D sketches.
2D Sketching in 3D
When you open a sketch in 3D, you can start the sketch anywhere. This
adds an origin. To use a 2D sketch mode in a 3D sketch, activate a planar
face by adding a 3D
sketch plane. You can also click 3D
Sketch on Plane (Sketch toolbar) or Insert,
3D Sketch on Plane to start sketching
in a 2D mode. This provides some additional benefits:
Inferences.
More relations are available, with some restrictions.
Snapping.
Only occurs with the geometry in the sketch plane. Exceptions include:
Snap to a curve that passes through a plane
and infer coincidence between the sketched point and the curve.
Snap to points off the plane when viewing
that plane normal to. This ensures that the point is coincident with the
projection onto the plane.
Related Topics
Using
3D Sketching Capabilities
Sketch
Relations in 3D Sketches
Dimensioning
a 3D Sketch
Coordinate
System in 3D Sketching