Sengna Posted February 8, 2019 Posted February 8, 2019 first of all this is not a table, i tried to extrude cut 4 holes (.25 in Dia) through the .10 in plate. what i did was that i extruded the 4 holes through, then i used subtract command, first i pick the plate and then i pick each hole to subtract but nothing happen, how would you do it? the final product would be the plate with 4 holes for monitor mounting bracket. thanks. Quote
ReMark Posted February 8, 2019 Posted February 8, 2019 (edited) It does not look like the four tubes have actually penetrated through the plate. Can you upload a copy of the drawing? Another way of doing it would have been to create a 2D profile (using a polyline) of the plate, add the circles for the holes, use the REGION command to create 5 regions (plate plus four holes), use the SUBTRACT command to subtract the "regioned" holes from the plate (it will appear as though nothing has changed) then use either EXTRUDE or PRESSPULL to give the plate the required depth. Edited February 8, 2019 by ReMark 1 Quote
Sengna Posted February 8, 2019 Author Posted February 8, 2019 (edited) i might did wrong, what i did was i create the whole profile in autocad 2D and i create block and i copy and paste in the 3d but i had to explode it in 3D, i should try the way you suggested me. bracket.dwg Edited February 8, 2019 by Sengna Quote
ReMark Posted February 8, 2019 Posted February 8, 2019 Is this what you are attempting to achieve? Quote
ReMark Posted February 8, 2019 Posted February 8, 2019 1 minute ago, Sengna said: ok, can you show me, thanks bracket.dwg Just as I guessed. The tubes do NOT penetrate all the way through the plate. They stop at the bottom face. Another option would have been to draw the four circles after the plate was extruded and use the PRESSPULL command to push the circles through the plate in order to create the holes. Quote
Sengna Posted February 8, 2019 Author Posted February 8, 2019 4 minutes ago, ReMark said: Is this what you are attempting to achieve? wow, yes this is exactly what i want to get , not the table Lol i will try the method you gave me Quote
Sengna Posted February 8, 2019 Author Posted February 8, 2019 9 minutes ago, ReMark said: Just as I guessed. The tubes do NOT penetrate all the way through the plate. They stop at the bottom face. Another option would have been to draw the four circles after the plate was extruded and use the PRESSPULL command to push the circles through the plate in order to create the holes. i also did this method, my issue was that i had a hard time drawing Ellipses for 4 circles on the plate, i the axis went to different direction. Quote
ReMark Posted February 8, 2019 Posted February 8, 2019 As with anything else one attempts to do with AutoCAD there can be multiple ways to achieve the intended result. Quote
ReMark Posted February 8, 2019 Posted February 8, 2019 Just now, Sengna said: i also did this method, my issue was that i had a hard time drawing Ellipses for 4 circles on the plate, i the axis went to different direction. Ellipses are not required; circles are. I typically work in a SE Isometric view to better observe what is going on. Only after I have achieved the desired result do I then rotate the object if required. Work smarter not harder. Quote
Sengna Posted February 8, 2019 Author Posted February 8, 2019 45 minutes ago, ReMark said: It does not look like the four tubes have actually penetrated through the plate. Can you upload a copy of the drawing? Another way of doing it would have been to create a 2D profile (using a polyline) of the plate, add the circles for the holes, use the REGION command to create 5 regions (plate plus four holes), use the SUBTRACT command to subtract the "regioned" holes from the plate (it will appear as though nothing has changed) then use either EXTRUDE or PRESSPULL to give the plate the required depth. i was able to follow this method by using the PEDIT command for the plate and after that i use REGEN command, and i was able to subtract the plate and the circles and the holes were cut through, that is cool. thank you Remark. Quote
ReMark Posted February 8, 2019 Posted February 8, 2019 Glad to hear you achieved the desired effect. You're entirely welcomed. Quote
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