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Ct. Mass. Pa. N.J. New York |
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Authorized Autodesk System Integrator |
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Inventor Transitional Constraints II |
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Autodesk Inventor: Moving Right Along By Bill Fane In a previous Autodesk Inventor® tutorial, you learned how to use two of the softwares motion constraints”Rotation-Rotation (gears or pulleys) and Rotation-Translation (rack and pinion). With these constraints, as with the Transitional constraint youll explore in this tutorial, you can analyze a mechanical assembly to ensure that the built part will function correctly and to demonstrate the function to other people. I can best describe the motion of the Transitional constraint as a cam and follower. Youll use this constraint to model and simulate a range of motions significantly more complex than those available with Rotation-Rotation and Rotation-Translation. A quick demonstration will show you the some of the power of this constraint. What Goes Around... 1. Start by downloading the ZIP file containing the files you will need to complete the tutorial. They works with Inventor 5.0 and later. Download (zip - 2013 Kb) 2. Unzip the file content into a suitable folder. 3. Start Inventor, go to the folder where you placed the content, and open the assembly file BF-03-01.iam, which looks like Figure 1.
4. Click the Place Constraint function in the panel bar, in R5.0 and 5.3 or in R6.0 and 7.0. The Place Constraint dialog box opens. 5. Click the Transitional tab (see Figure 2).
Note: You must click the bottom, curved face of the red follower before you click the upper, curved face of the green cam. Do not click edges or any other faces. 7. In the Place Constraint dialog box, click Apply > Cancel, which adds a Transitional constraint as the last item in the Browser and closes this dialog box. 8. In the Browser, right-click the DRIVE ME angle constraint, which is just above the Transitional constraint. 9. When the context menu opens, click Drive Constraint, which opens the Drive Constraint dialog box. 10. Click the Forward button, and then watch in shock and awe as the green cam rotates three revolutions while the red follower faithfully follows its contour. 11. When the motion has finished, click Cancel. 12. Move the cursor to a point within the region of the green cams smaller arc. 13. Press and hold down the left mouse button. 14. Drag the cursor around in a circular motion, centered approximately on the center of the larger arc of the cam. As with other constraints in Inventor, you can drag the components around and the constraints update dynamically. The follower stays in contact with the cam and oscillates properly. You have now applied and used the Transitional constraint in a fairly rudimentary way. (Keep in mind that I said earlier that this constraint offered a great range of motion.) So why is this constraint called Transitional? Take a close look at the green cam. Now, compare it to the one shown in Figure 4, which is a screen shot of assembly file BF-03-02.iam.
The cam in Figure 4 consists of a simple, circular shape, extruded eccentrically to the shaft. The contact face of the cam consists of a single, continuous, constant-radius surface constrained with a Tangent constraint. In this instance, the follower has a simple reciprocating motion when you rotate the cam. Now look at the cam in Figures 1 and 3. Its contact face consists of two arc portions that transition (hence, Transitional constraint) between two straight portions. The contact face actually consists of four surfaces. The unique Shape Manager technology within Inventor makes it possible for this transitional surface to work as a cam. But Wait, Theres More! The transitions do not even have to be smooth tangencies. 1. Open the assembly file BF-03-03.iam, which looks like Figure 5.
2. Apply a Transition constraint between the curved, lower face of the red follower and the flat, upper face of the green cam. Remember to select the follower first. The assembly should now look like the one shown in Figure 6.
3. Click and drag the cam with a circular motion. The red follower faithfully stays in contact with the cam as it passes over the cams sharp corners. 4. Try driving the DRIVE ME constraint. What happens? A Flat World... So far, you have been using a curved follower. The next exercise shows that a flat-faced follower works every bit as well. 1. Open the assembly file BF-03-03.iam, which looks like Figure 7.
2. Apply a Transitional constraint between the flat underside of the red follower and the upper, curved face of the cam. Remember to select the follower first. 3. Click and drag the cam with a circular motion. The red follower faithfully stays in contact with the cam as it passes over the cams sharp corners. 4. Try driving the DRIVE ME constraint. What happens? A Really Flat World... If you are impressed by what we have done so far, then watch this. 1. Open the assembly file BF-03-05.iam, which looks like Figure 8.
2. Apply a Transitional constraint between the curved underside of the red follower and the upper, flat face of the cam. Remember to select the follower first, and then pick any face on the top edge of the cam. 3. Click and drag the cam with a side-to-side motion. The red follower faithfully stays in contact with the cam as it follows the cams side-to-side motion. The action may be a little sticky at first until Inventor does all its number-crunching. Now that is magic! The Transitional constraint also works within a closed-slot cam profile. As youve just seen, a plate cam does not necessarily have to be open-sided. Now that you understand the basic principles, here are a few tips, tricks, and pointers.
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