Part Sweep/es

Descripción
La herramienta Part Barrido se usa para crear una cara, una carcasa o una forma sólida desde uno o más perfiles (atravesando secciones) proyectados a lo largo de una trayectoria.

La herramienta Barrido del banco de trabajo Part es similar a la de Part Loft con el añadido de una trayectoria para definir la proyección entre perfiles.

Barrido de un sólido generado desde un único perfil (A) proyectado a lo largo de una trayectoria (B).

Uso

 * 1) Presionar el botón  . Esto abre los parámetros de Barrido del Panel de tareas.
 * 2) En Perfiles disponibles de la columna de la izquierda (anteriormente Vértice/Arista/Alambre/Cara en la versión v0.16), pinchar sobre el elemento que será usado como perfil del barrido, después pinchar la flecha que indica hacia la derecha para colocarlo en los Perfiles seleccionados de la columna de la derecha (anteriormente Barrido en la versión v0.16). Repetir la operación si se desea utilizar más de un perfil. Usar las flechas que indican hacia arriba y hacia abajo para reordenar los perfiles seleccionados.
 * 3) Pulsar el botón  y después, elegir entre cualquiera de estos dos modos de selección:
 * 4) * Selección de un único segmento: Seleccionar una o más aristas consecutivas en la 3D View (pulsar para selección múltiple) y presionar . El barrido únicamente será generado a lo largo de las aristas seleccionadas.
 * 5) * Selección de una trayectoria completa: Ir a la pestaña Modelo de la Vista combinada, seleccionar en el árbol el objeto 2D que se ha de usar como trayectoria, volver al Panel de tareas y pulsar . Otra manera sería haciendo doble clic con el ratón sobre una de las aristas consecutivas para que se seleccionen todas ellas. El barrido será generado a lo largo de todas las aristas consecutivas halladas en el objeto 2D.
 * 6) Definir las opciones Crear sólido y Ángulo fijo.
 * 7) Aceptar con el botón

Accepted geometry

 * Profiles: can be a point (vertex), line (Edge), wire or face. Edges and wires may be either open or closed. There are various profile limitations and complications, see below, however the profiles may come from the Part Workbench primitives, Draft Workbench features and Sketches.


 * Path: can be a line (Edge) or series of connecting lines, wire or various Part Workbench primitives, Draft Workbench features or a Sketch. The path is often selected directly from the main model window, however it can also be selected from the Tree View (Model Tab of Combo View). The path can either be an entire appropriate shape or an appropriate sub-component of a more advance shape (for example, an edge of a [[Image:Part_Box.svg|24px]] Part Cube could be selected as the path). The path may be either open or closed and will thus create either an open or closed Sweep. A closed path such as a Part Circle will result in a closed Sweep. For example a Sweep of a smaller circle around a path of a larger circle will create a torus.

Solid
If "Solid" is set to "true", FreeCAD creates a solid, provided the profiles are of closed geometry; if set to "false", FreeCAD creates a face or (if more than one face) a shell for either open or closed profiles.

Frenet
The "Frenet" property controls how the profile orientation changes as it follows along the sweep path. If "Frenet" is "false", the orientation of the profile is kept consistent from point to point. The resulting shape has the minimum possible twisting. Unintuitively, when a profile is swept along a helix, this results in the orientation of the profile slowly creep (rotate) as it follows the helix. Setting "Frenet" to true prevents such a creep.

If "Frenet" is "true" the orientation of the profile is computed basing on local curvature and tangency vectors of the path. This keeps the orientation of the profile consistent when sweeping along a helix (because curvature vector of a straight helix is always pointing to its axis). However, when path is not a helix, the resulting shape can have strange looking twists sometimes. For more information, see Frenet Serret formulas.

Transition
"Transition" sets the transition style of the Sweep at a joint in the path, if the path does not define the corner transition (for example where the path is a wire). The property is not exposed in the Task panel and can be found in properties after the Sweep has been created.

Profile limitations and complications

 * A vertex or point
 * vertex or point may only be used as the first and/or last profile in the list of profiles.
 * For example
 * you can not Sweep from a circle to a point, to a ellipse.
 * However you could Sweep from a point to a circle to an ellipse to another point.
 * Open or closed geometry profiles can not be mixed in one single Sweep
 * In one Sweep, all profiles (lines wires etc.) must be either open or closed.
 * For example
 * FreeCAD can not Sweep between one Part Circle and one default Part Line.
 * Draft Workbench features
 * Draft Workbench features can be directly used as a profile in FreeCAD 0.14 or later.
 * For example the following Draft features can be used as profiles in a Part Sweep
 * Draft Polygon.
 * Draft Point, Line, wire,
 * Draft B-spline, Bezier Curve
 * Draft Circle, Ellipse, Rectangle
 * PartDesign Sketches
 * The profile may be created with a sketch. However only a valid sketch will be shown in the list to be available for selection.
 * The sketch must contain only one open or closed wire or line (can be multiple lines, if those lines are all connected as they are then a single wire)
 * Part Workbench
 * the profile can be a valid Part geometric primitive which can be created with the Part Primitives tool
 * For example the following Part geometric primitives can be a valid profile
 * Point (Vertex), Line (Edge)
 * Helix, Spiral
 * Circle, Ellipse
 * Regular Polygon
 * Plane (Face)

Links

 * Since Sweep is often used to create threads for screws, you should see Thread for Screw Tutorial.