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Full Version: Patch Modelling (Curved Surfaces) Help Required

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From: Simon (GRIMMY)
13 Mar 2019   [#8] In reply to [#7]
Ok thanks. I still don't really understand it but thanks anyway.
From: Frenchy Pilou (PILOU)
13 Mar 2019   [#9] In reply to [#8]
Where are you blocked ?
I return in 4 hours!
From: Frenchy Pilou (PILOU)
13 Mar 2019   [#10]
Some closeup...


Draw the perpendicular curve through edges & first curve a little more bigger
Sweep them
Kill the lateral face
Extrude bottom perimeter
Select surface sweeped Boolean merge with extruded lateral faces
erase that you don't want
join top surface and lateral faces
Fillet (0,2 here)
That's all!


From: Michael Gibson
13 Mar 2019   [#11] In reply to [#4]
Hi Simon, it's best to form the cap by an intersection with another surface which is what Pilou is showing above.

Even if you are modeling things "patch by patch" there are still many situations where you want to make extended surfaces that then get trimmed with each other rather than trying to literally build every single surface all by itself from non-planar curves.

So for your case here you would want to start with these 2 planar profile curves:



Extrude this one to make an extended base shape that punches through your main body and also extends past the other profile as viewed from the top:



Do boolean difference on the extrusion to cut off the end and leave the imprint of the profile:





Then you trim that and the main body with each other.

If you want to have a more complex curvy "cap" that does not have a single 2D profile curve you would build an extended cutting surface using something like sweep or loft and use that surface as the cutting object in the boolean difference. See here for some a recent examples:
http://moi3d.com/forum/index.php?webtag=MOI&msg=9281.7
http://moi3d.com/forum/index.php?webtag=MOI&msg=9264.2

Making extended surfaces with simple regular structures that then get trimmed is still a major part of NURBS modeling technique even if you're doing things at a surface level.

- Michael

Image Attachments:
simon_cap1.jpg  simon_cap2.jpg  simon_cap3.jpg  simon_cap4.jpg 


From: Frenchy Pilou (PILOU)
13 Mar 2019   [#12]
With these 2 versions you have seen quasi all Boolan functions! :)

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