Preparing chamfer toolpaths

00:08

The Turning Chamfer toolpath is useful for breaking sharp corners

00:14

on a part that may not have been chamfered in the design.

00:18

For this video, open the file Turning Chamfer.f3d.

00:23

In the setup, you can see that the part has already been faced, profile roughed, profile finished,

00:30

and that the grooving toolpath has been finished.

00:34

Zoom and pan on the part to see a few of the edges that can be chamfered.

00:40

In this example, the two inside edges of the groove area can be chamfered.

00:46

To add a chamfer toolpath, on the Toolbar, Manufacture workspace, Turning tab,

00:54

Turning panel, expand the Turning drop-down and select Turning Chamfer.

01:02

A dialog for Chamfer1 opens.

01:05

At this point, Under Tool, next to Tool, you would click Select…

01:11

and select the tool you want to make the chamfer from the tool library.

01:16

In this case, a grooving tool already appears in the canvas

01:20

because the last operation completed was a grooving operation,

01:24

and this same tool will also work to create the chamfer.

01:29

In the dialog, open the Geometry tab.

01:33

In the canvas, select the edges that you want to chamfer.

01:38

In this case, click the two inside edges.

01:42

Note that the Chamfers selection tool changes to 2 Edges.

01:48

In the canvas, a preview of the chamfered edges appears.

01:53

For one side, the chamfer tool looks like it will create the chamfer correctly,

01:58

but on the other side, it looks like it misses the mark.

02:02

This is because the control point of the tool can only be on one edge of the tool,

02:08

and in this case, it is on the back edge.

02:11

But, when you zoom in, you can see that the preview shows the highlighted area

02:16

that will be cut through the model based on the control point of the tool.

02:21

Zoom back out.

02:24

In the dialog, open the Passes tab.

02:28

Under Passes, in the Chamfer Width field, type “.015” to create a deburring edge break.

02:38

Leave the Chamfer Extension field set to forty-thousandths of an inch (0.04 in),

02:45

and the Chamfer Angle set to 45 degrees.

02:49

Click OK.

02:52

Simulate the toolpath again to check your changes.

02:56

In the Browser, under Models, expand all the models.

03:02

Turn off the visibility for the part that you are machining,

03:05

which in this case is Steering Quick Release v1:1.

03:10

Then, click Setup1, and, from the toolbar, in the Actions panel, click Simulate.

03:20

The Simulate dialog opens.

03:23

In the Browser, click Chamfer1.

03:27

In the Simulate dialog, in the Display tab, under Toolpath, expand the Mode drop-down and select Tail.

03:39

Then, enable the Stock checkbox.

03:43

On the Simulation Player, click Play.

03:47

As the simulation animates the chamfer operation,

03:51

zoom in to see that the two chamfered edges are now added to the part where you specified the edge break.

Video transcript

00:08

The Turning Chamfer toolpath is useful for breaking sharp corners

00:14

on a part that may not have been chamfered in the design.

00:18

For this video, open the file Turning Chamfer.f3d.

00:23

In the setup, you can see that the part has already been faced, profile roughed, profile finished,

00:30

and that the grooving toolpath has been finished.

00:34

Zoom and pan on the part to see a few of the edges that can be chamfered.

00:40

In this example, the two inside edges of the groove area can be chamfered.

00:46

To add a chamfer toolpath, on the Toolbar, Manufacture workspace, Turning tab,

00:54

Turning panel, expand the Turning drop-down and select Turning Chamfer.

01:02

A dialog for Chamfer1 opens.

01:05

At this point, Under Tool, next to Tool, you would click Select…

01:11

and select the tool you want to make the chamfer from the tool library.

01:16

In this case, a grooving tool already appears in the canvas

01:20

because the last operation completed was a grooving operation,

01:24

and this same tool will also work to create the chamfer.

01:29

In the dialog, open the Geometry tab.

01:33

In the canvas, select the edges that you want to chamfer.

01:38

In this case, click the two inside edges.

01:42

Note that the Chamfers selection tool changes to 2 Edges.

01:48

In the canvas, a preview of the chamfered edges appears.

01:53

For one side, the chamfer tool looks like it will create the chamfer correctly,

01:58

but on the other side, it looks like it misses the mark.

02:02

This is because the control point of the tool can only be on one edge of the tool,

02:08

and in this case, it is on the back edge.

02:11

But, when you zoom in, you can see that the preview shows the highlighted area

02:16

that will be cut through the model based on the control point of the tool.

02:21

Zoom back out.

02:24

In the dialog, open the Passes tab.

02:28

Under Passes, in the Chamfer Width field, type “.015” to create a deburring edge break.

02:38

Leave the Chamfer Extension field set to forty-thousandths of an inch (0.04 in),

02:45

and the Chamfer Angle set to 45 degrees.

02:49

Click OK.

02:52

Simulate the toolpath again to check your changes.

02:56

In the Browser, under Models, expand all the models.

03:02

Turn off the visibility for the part that you are machining,

03:05

which in this case is Steering Quick Release v1:1.

03:10

Then, click Setup1, and, from the toolbar, in the Actions panel, click Simulate.

03:20

The Simulate dialog opens.

03:23

In the Browser, click Chamfer1.

03:27

In the Simulate dialog, in the Display tab, under Toolpath, expand the Mode drop-down and select Tail.

03:39

Then, enable the Stock checkbox.

03:43

On the Simulation Player, click Play.

03:47

As the simulation animates the chamfer operation,

03:51

zoom in to see that the two chamfered edges are now added to the part where you specified the edge break.

Video quiz

When chamfering an edge, in the Turning Chamfer dialog, the control point of the Chamfer tool can be set to how many edges?

(Select one)
Select an answer

1/1 questions left unanswered

Step-by-step guide

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