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12

Creating a Sheet Metal Part

In this chapter, you create the sheet metal part shown here. This chapter demonstrates:
q Extruding a thin feature q Inserting bends q Rolling back a design q Using the Feature Palette window q Applying a forming tool q Creating, positioning, and patterning a form

feature For more information about SolidWorks sheet metal functions, see Chapter 12 of the SolidWorks 99 Users Guide and online help.

SolidWorks 99 Tutorial

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Chapter 12 Creating a Sheet Metal Part

Extruding a Thin Feature


When developing a sheet metal part, it is generally a good idea to design the part in the bent-up state. This allows you to capture the design intent and the dimensions of the finished part. Sheet metal parts must have a uniform thickness. One way to achieve this is to extrude a thin feature base from an open profile sketch.
1 Open a new part document, open a sketch on Plane3, and click Normal To

2 Click Grid on the Sketch toolbar, click to clear the Display grid and Snap to points check boxes, and click OK. 3 Starting at the origin, sketch a vertical line upward, and dimension the line to 200mm. 4 Sketch two horizontal lines as shown. Dimension the upper horizontal line to 50mm. 5 Click Add Relation or Tools, Relations, Add, and add an Equal relation between the two horizontal lines. 6 Click Extruded Boss/Base

or Insert, Base, Extrude.

The Extrude Thin Feature dialog box appears.


7 On the End Condition tab:

Set Type to Mid Plane. Set Depth to 100mm.


8 On the Thin Feature tab:

Set Type to One-Direction. Set Wall Thickness to 2mm (the thickness of the part). Select Reverse to extrude the wall thickness inside, if necessary.
9 Click OK.

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Inserting Sheet Metal Bends


Now you convert the thin feature part to a sheet metal part. To create the bends, you must specify the following:
q Fixed face the face that remains fixed when the software unfolds (flattens) the sheet

metal part.
q Default bend radius the default inside bend radius used when creating a bend or

adding a wall.
q Bend allowance use one of the following methods:

Bend table. A material-specific table that you create, containing bend allowances derived from calculations based on thickness and bend radius. K-factor. A ratio that represents the location of the neutral sheet to the thickness of the sheet metal part. Bend allowance value. An explicit value that you enter based on your experience and shop practices.
1 Click Insert Bends

on the Features toolbar, or click Insert, Features, Bends.

The Flatten-Bends dialog box appears.


2 Select the front face of the thin feature base to be the fixed face. 3 Set the Default bend radius to 2mm. 4 Under Bend allowance, make sure that Use k-factor is selected. For this example, use

the default value of 0.5.


5 Make sure that Use auto relief is selected. This allows the software to add relief cuts

wherever necessary to make the bends. For this example, leave the relief type as Rectangular and leave Relief ratio at the default value of 0.5. The relief ratio is the distance by which the relief cut extends past a bend region.
6 Click OK. 7 Save the part as Cover.sldprt.

SolidWorks 99 Tutorial

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Chapter 12 Creating a Sheet Metal Part

Rolling Back the Design


Examine the FeatureManager design tree. Three new features exist that represent the steps in the process of creating a sheet metal part.
q Sheet-Metal1. The Sheet-Metal feature marks the beginning

of the process. It contains the default bend parameters.


q Flatten-Bends1. The Flatten-Bends feature adds the

necessary bends with the bend allowance and flattens the part into a flat sheet with bend lines at the appropriate places.
q Process-Bends1. The Process-Bends feature folds

(processes) the flattened part, returning it to its bent-up state. Now flatten the sheet metal part to insert holes in the flanges. You could have inserted the holes before inserting the bends. However, in this example, you insert the holes in the same order as the manufacturing process: the flat shape of the part is cut, the holes are punched, then the part is folded. To flatten the bent-up part, you roll back to the flattened state, and insert the new feature just before the Process-Bends feature. Inserting the new feature before the Process-Bends feature ensures that the new feature is visible when the part is flat.
1 Click Hidden Lines Removed

2 Roll back the design to the flattened state using one of the following methods:

Click Flattened

on the Features toolbar.

Click Process-Bends1 in the FeatureManager design tree, then click Edit, Rollback. Click the rollback bar at the bottom of the FeatureManager design tree, then drag the bar up until it is above Process-Bends1. The pointer changes to a hand, and the bar changes from yellow to blue when selected. Whichever method you use, the part is flattened, revealing the tangent edges of the bend regions. The overall developed length of the flat sheet is calculated, compensating for the bend radius and bend allowance.

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3 To see the actual bend lines, right-click the Sharp-Sketch feature under Flatten-Bends, and select Show. 4 To hide the bend lines, right-click the Sharp-Sketch feature again, and select Hide.

Bend line

Tangent edges of bend region

Inserting the Holes


Now that the part is flat, insert the holes.
1 Open a sketch on the front face, or on either of the flange faces. 2 Click Centerline

, and sketch a horizontal centerline across the midpoints of the front face as shown. or

3 With the centerline still selected, click Mirror click Tools, Sketch Tools, Mirror. 4 Sketch two circles on the upper flattened flange.

The two circles are mirrored on the bottom flattened flange.


5 Dimension the upper-left circle to a diameter of 10mm. 6 Click Add Relation a)

or Tools, Relations, Add.

Add an Equal relation between the two upper circles. b) Add a Horizontal relation between the centerpoints of the two upper circles. c) Close the Add Geometric Relations dialog box.

7 Finish dimensioning the upper circles as shown.

All four circles are now fully defined.

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Chapter 12 Creating a Sheet Metal Part

8 Click Extruded Cut or Insert, Cut, Extrude, set Type to Through All, and click OK. 9 To restore the part to the folded state, click Flattened or drag the rollback bar to the

bottom of the FeatureManager design tree. Examine the FeatureManager design tree. Notice that the Cut-Extrude feature is between the Flatten-Bends and Process-Bends features.
10 Save the part.

Using Forming Tools and the Feature Palette Window


Sheet metal forming tools are special SolidWorks parts that act as dies that bend, stretch, or otherwise form sheet metal. You apply forming tools to sheet metal parts through the Feature Palette window to create louvers, lances, ribs, and so on. The SolidWorks software includes some sample forming tools to get you started. You use one of these forming tools in this example. For more information about forming tools and the Feature Palette, see Chapter 11 of the SolidWorks 99 Users Guide and online help.

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Applying the Forming Tool


1 Click Tools, Feature Palette to display the Feature Palette window.

By default, the Feature Palette window opens at the top level folder, or Palette Home. The Feature Palette window stays on top of the SolidWorks window while you work.
2 Double-click the forming tools folder labeled Louvers.

to open it, then double-click the folder

Palette items are displayed as thumbnail graphics, making it easy to locate, select, and insert them into SolidWorks part and assembly documents.
3 To apply the louver to the sheet metal

part, drag the louver from the Feature Palette window to the front face of the sheet metal part. Do not drop the forming tool yet. By default, forming tools travel downward through the selected face.
4 To switch the direction of travel upward, press the Tab key.

Preview indicating downward

The preview updates automatically.

Preview indicating upward

5 Drop the forming tool.

The Position form feature dialog box is displayed. Leaving the Position form feature dialog box open, locate the louver on the face using the positioning sketch.
Positioning sketch

6 To rotate the positioning sketch 90, click Modify Sketch click Tools, Sketch Tools, Modify.

on the Sketch toolbar, or

7 Type 90 in the Rotate box in the Modify Sketch dialog box, and press Enter. 8 Click Close.

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Chapter 12 Creating a Sheet Metal Part

9 Click Dimension

, click Plane2 in the FeatureManager design tree, and click the horizontal centerline of the positioning sketch. Set the dimension value to 40mm.

Horizontal centerline

Vertical centerline

10 To center the louver on the face and to fully define the positioning sketch, add a Collinear geometric relation between Plane3 and the

vertical centerline of the positioning sketch.

11 Click Finish to exit the Position form feature

dialog box.
12 Click the

button in the Feature Palette window

to close it. Examine the FeatureManager design tree. Notice that the form feature, louver1, appears after the Process-Bends1 feature.

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Patterning the Form Feature


Now create a linear pattern of the louver.
1 Click Linear Pattern

or Insert, Pattern/Mirror, Linear Pattern.

2 Click the Direction selected box, then click a vertical edge of the front face.

An arrow appears in the preview indicating the direction of the pattern.


3 Select Reverse direction to point the arrow upward, if necessary. 4 Set Spacing to 40 and Total instances to 4. 5 Make sure that louver1 is listed in the Items to copy box. 6 Select Geometry pattern.

The Geometry pattern option speeds up the creation and rebuilding of the pattern. Individual instances of the feature are copied, but not solved.
7 Click OK. 8 Save the part.

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