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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.
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.
Step-by-step guide