Contents
How do you make a cylinder in Fusion 360?
To create cylinder, you should know the base shape of cylinder, which is circle. So, click create –> center diameter circle. Input the diameter of the circle. Click finish sketch.29 déc. 2020
How do you cut a cylinder in half in Fusion 360?
How do you sketch on a face in Fusion 360?
How do you wrap text around a cylinder in Fusion 360?
How do you make different bodies in Fusion 360?
Whenever you create a 2D sketch in Fusion 360 and then extrude it into a 3D shape, you automatically create a body. The keyword about a body is that it has to be continuous. Take a cube and cut it in half, and you now have two bodies.28 août 2018
Which view shows a drawing part at an enlarged scale?
documentation detail view
How do you split objects in Fusion 360?
How do you wrap patterns in Fusion 360?
How do you add text to a surface in Fusion 360?
How do you wrap text in fusion?
What is the difference between bodies and components in Fusion 360?
Components are the building blocks that make up assemblies, and a body is one of the elements that make up a component. Each component contains one or more bodies, as well as its own set of origin planes, sketches, construction geometry, joints, and other elements.
What does grounding do in Fusion 360?
Grounding locks the origin of the grounded component to the top level origin in that design/file and only there. So an assembly has its own origin. When you ground the assembly its origin it’s fixed.20 août 2019
What are the 4 basic components of an engineering drawing?
1. Dimension Text.
2. Dimension Line andArrows.
3. Extension Lines.
4. Gap.
What are the most common views on a multiview drawing?
Although six different sides can be drawn, usually three views of a drawing give enough information to make a three-dimensional object. These views are known as front view, top view and end view. Other names for these views include plan, elevation and section.
What are the different drawing views?
1. Base View. The first view created in a drawing.
2. Projected View. An orthographic or isometric view that is generated from a base view or other existing view.
3. Auxiliary View. A view projected perpendicular to a user-selected line or edge.
4. Section View.
5. Detail View.
6. Overlay View.
7. Draft View.