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    Have a line, need a curve

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    • R Offline
      richardtallent
      last edited by

      I'm trying to model this freestanding soaker tub:

      http://home.tallent.us/postedfiles/Melissa-Photo.jpg

      So far, this is where I am:

      http://home.tallent.us/postedfiles/Melissa-CAD.png

      The bow and stern of the actual tub are curved, but my model just has straight lines between the top and bottom curve vertices.

      How can I deform these surfaces to more closely resemble the actual tub? I contacted Modern Bathrooms (the distributor) and they sent me a PDF spec sheet but of course have no CAD files available. Here it is if it is more clear than the photo.

      Thanks!

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      • ely862meE Offline
        ely862me
        last edited by

        Try to use follow me with a curved profile.
        Make it at first symmetric and after that use Fredo Scale to scale it from top .

        Hope it helps!

        Elisei (sketchupper)


        Before no life was done on Earth it was THE LIFE ITSELF...GOD
        Come and See EliseiDesign

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        • mitcorbM Offline
          mitcorb
          last edited by

          I noticed the pdf gives dimensions, but not enough dimensions, I believe. Of course you could do an image trace on screen to get the model going, but you cannot simply transcribe all of the dimensions. So, as ely862me says, that may be the best way.

          EDIT: Oh, and you will most likely need to scale up the whole business for modeling so you don't encounter the tiny faces issue.

          I take the slow, deliberate approach in my aimless wandering.

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          • mitcorbM Offline
            mitcorb
            last edited by

            I thought I would mount that pdf and attempt to trace it. I tried to scale it to the 48 1/2". Of course, the 36 1/4" dim had no relation to that one, nor any of the other ones. The whole page is intentionally distorted. I also tried to map it out and do fillets. You will not be able to locate the arc endpoints exactly.

            I take the slow, deliberate approach in my aimless wandering.

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            • D Offline
              driven
              last edited by

              I'd work in metric as it's a european design.. set a drawing to meters and scale it back [by 1000] when finished.

              It will auto convert on import to an imperial unit drawing.
              from the site
              john

              learn from the mistakes of others, you may not live long enough to make them all yourself...

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              • gillesG Offline
                gilles
                last edited by

                You could use TIG's Extrude edges by edges:


                draw profiles


                apply EEbE


                bathtube - Scène 4.jpg


                bathtube - Scène 5.jpg


                bathtube - Scène 6.jpg


                bathtube - Scène 7.jpg

                " c'est curieux chez les marins ce besoin de faire des phrases "

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                • mitcorbM Offline
                  mitcorb
                  last edited by

                  Hi, gilles:
                  Very well done.

                  I take the slow, deliberate approach in my aimless wandering.

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                  • gillesG Offline
                    gilles
                    last edited by

                    thanks TIG.
                    👍

                    " c'est curieux chez les marins ce besoin de faire des phrases "

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                    • mitcorbM Offline
                      mitcorb
                      last edited by

                      Yes, thanks TIG 👍

                      I take the slow, deliberate approach in my aimless wandering.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • irwanwrI Offline
                        irwanwr
                        last edited by

                        😄 another one wizard's plugin i've just learnt 👍

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