Eric The Viking
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- 19 Jan 2010
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This isn't a brick-bat - I probably chose the wrong material to demonstrate it.
It's supposed to be a stopped groove in a block of material. I'm trying to make ones like this with both ends stopped, but I've been bumping into SketchUp geometry problems, which are making it very hard.
Stopped grooves must get used in classical architecture a fair bit (fluted columns, etc.), so I was wondering if anyone had a clever (quick-ish) way to make them.
I've tried making spheres (and hemispheres), and using Follow Me to get the right shapes, but I keep falling foul of the design issue in SU that it approximates circles with polygons. So, I make a flat semicircle (in the 'ground' plane), but Follow Me on a quadrant coming vertically off the circle's edge (actually down, along and back up again) doesn't produce what I'd hoped. Here's the way I've been trying it:
The grey semicircle ought to "Follow Me" along the blue line, round the quadrant, along the straight and back up again, giving the shape outlined in black (the open semicircle end (right) shows where the lathe should finish).
Note: when doing this exercise, I deleted the black lines above, leaving only the grey semicircle (the source profile) and the blue Follow Me path. All the lines created come from the Follow Me tool.
I think the Follow Me tool sees the two quadrants on its lathe line as a group of straight lines (part of a polygon), and it lathes the circle along them, rather than round a true arc. So the last bit isn't a tangent to the circle - you get a face pointing the wrong way, which in turn means you can't extrude it. Here's what happens:
The two faces I've put texture on seem to be created by Follow Me. The one on the left _isn't_ the original semicircle, and they aren't coplanar, nor aligned with the axes (you can see the red axis cuts through on a slant.
If I turn on "show hidden geometry" and look closely at one end, you can see the weirdness clearly:
That was with setting the number of lines in each quadrant to 48. It looks like a barge boat if it's left at the default of 6. It's almost as if the start and end of each quadrant is wrongly calculated.
It's hair-tearing at the moment, but there must be a simple way...
Heeelp, please!
E.