How to close to make solid
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 From:  Michael Gibson
10586.12 In reply to 10586.11 
Hi Matadem, do you mean something like this, done here with sweep?







- Michael

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 From:  Matadem
10586.13 
Good day.
Yes that is what I am looking for.
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 From:  Michael Gibson
10586.14 In reply to 10586.13 
Hi Matadem, here is a version with that sweep put in, I built a new one that extended a bit over to make sure it could intersect well and then trimmed away parts so the sweep could fit in:



- Michael

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 From:  Psygorn (DRILLBIT)
10586.15 In reply to 10586.14 
Hellow all/ @Michael,

I was working on a mesh and I couldn't make a solid out of it and I don't know why, could you please take a look at it? I even tried to reconstruct it using "rebuild" script but again no Solid!
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 From:  Michael Gibson
10586.16 In reply to 10586.15 
Hi Psygorn, if you highlight naked edges (instructions here: http://moi3d.com/forum/index.php?webtag=MOI&msg=10582.13 ) this is the problem area:



Zooming in to this area:





That's a gap between edges there that is just a little bit too far apart to be joined together.

The top looks like it's ok it's the bottom where the pieces are not close enough together to be joined.

- Michael

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 From:  Michael Gibson
10586.17 In reply to 10586.15 
Hi Psygorn, I've attached a version of your object here that is a solid now. I deleted the faces around that problem area, did an "untrim" to remove the current trim boundaries that were kind of messy with a couple of little edge fragments in them, then lofted between the 2 semi-circles, joined those pieces together and then used Construct > Planar to cap off the flat pieces.

- Michael
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 From:  Psygorn (DRILLBIT)
10586.18 In reply to 10586.16 
Hi Michael,

Ok, Thank you so much.
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 From:  Psygorn (DRILLBIT)
10586.19 In reply to 10586.17 
Thank you Michael,

I was able to repeat the process.

However, I want to ask you something do u know if I a mesh which is joined surfaces and pretty small gap is printable or not?
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 From:  Michael Gibson
10586.20 In reply to 10586.19 
Hi Psygorn,

re:
> However, I want to ask you something do u know if I a mesh which is joined surfaces and
> pretty small gap is printable or not?

It depends on the particular situation but probably not.

It's more of a problem than just a gap - the triangulation generated for the STL file will not have watertight synchronized vertex structures across the unjoined edges.

Maybe some slicers could tolerate that but I kind of doubt it.

- Michael
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 From:  Psygorn (DRILLBIT)
10586.21 In reply to 10586.20 
Hi Michael,

Ok I see. Yet I can say that I had experienced it before (one time I had a STL file and it was not water tight but the printing machine was able to print it! However, I have to say I did not discover the mistake until the piece was printed. I think I got lucky!) So, as u mentioned I think it depends on the situation and I can say it is safe to have the 3D model water tight.

Thank you for your support.
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 From:  Matadem
10586.22 
Good day Michael.

I finally got some time work back on this.
Since I wanted a 2mm edge so I have projected a closed curve on the model so I could get the desired lines.
And then try to sweep it but I could not get a solid out of it. pls help.

see attached file.

Thank you!
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 From:  Michael Gibson
10586.23 In reply to 10586.22 
Hi Matadem, the curves to sweep in your attached file are not suitable for making a solid just by themselves. It would be too thin at the ends and be essentially the same as a self intersection in those areas.

To incorporate this into the main model you would sweep to build just a surface and then trim away surrounding areas to make a place to join it in.

I've done that with the model that I attached in the above post here:
http://moi3d.com/forum/index.php?webtag=MOI&msg=10586.14

Was that finished solid that I posted there not suitable for what you need?

- Michael
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 From:  Matadem
10586.24 In reply to 10586.23 
I did another try here
2 small rectangles at the end a bigger one in the middle which the rails goes into the middle of it...sweep then move this whole solid into my model pushing the other half into my model.
That seems to work but probably not the best or efficient way to do it?

Michael what you shown me was extremely useful, the reason I wanted for a 2mm thickness so it could be easier to sand when fitting the 3d printed item.
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 From:  Michael Gibson
10586.25 In reply to 10586.24 
Hi Matadem, that looks like a pretty good method. The only thing I'd be a little worried about is if the ends that are just barely skimming over the surface area on the main piece can be booleaned in or not. Surfaces that just barely skim over each other can tend to be difficult for booleans.

But if it worked out ok for you then that's great it was not a problem in this particular case.

- Michael
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