You can calculate the developed length of sheet metal parts using bend calculation tables.
With bend calculation tables, you can define different angular ranges, assign
equations to those ranges, and calculate the developed length of the part.
The default location for bend calculation tables is install_dir\lang\english\Sheetmetal Bend
Tables.
Example of a bend calculation table:
|
Column A |
Displays the variables that can be used in equations:
- s = material thickness
- r = bend radius
- k-factor = k-factor (you can use an equation or a value)
- ß = aperture angle
|
Angular Range |
Lets you define the angular ranges. The angular
range defines the different ranges that must be used for specific calculations.
- You define the smallest angular value of a range to the left of
ß
- ß = angle variable
- You define the largest angular value of a range to the right of
ß
|
Equation |
Lets you define the equation to use for the
angular range. You can also use a constant value. |
use tangent length |
Lets you determine the method to calculate
flanges: virtual sharp or tangent length. The equation that
calculates developed length is: LD = A + B + V, where V can be negative. When V is
negative, it is the same as using bend deduction, even though the equation is for
bend allowance.
|
Bend Calculation Examples
Angular Range |
Example |
0 <= ß <= 90 |
Tangent length = Yes
|
90 < ß <= 165 |
Tangent length = No
|
165 < ß <= 180 |
Tangent length = No
|