Next make a copy of one of the parts by selecting it, then right clicking. Hiding one body (by unchecking it in the tree) shows the newly imprinted face on the other body: PADT, Inc. Next we’ll see about having separate parts. The mesh is continuous across the parts automatically. Here the contact branch is empty since the two parts share topology (have a common surface where they touch). Bringing the model into Mechanical at this point will result in a continuous mesh, with common nodes at the boundary between the parts. Note that if we simply want to have a continuous mesh across these parts, we are done. Click the green checkmark to execute if the red preview looks to be correct. This will produce a common face where parts touch. The geometry could have been imported from CAD or created in SpaceClaim. Here we start with two simple parts that are touching but are separate and distinct. Presentation on theme: "Creating Matching Faces on Touching Parts"- Presentation transcript:ġ Creating Matching Faces on Touching PartsĪNSYS SpaceClaim Ted Harris, PADT, Inc.
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