Click Chordal Fillet
in the Dress-Up Features toolbar (Fillets
sub-toolbar).
The Chordal Fillet Definition
dialog box appears.
The default options let you define a cubic variation of the chordal fillet.
Select the edge you want to fillet.
You can select closed edges.
The application detects both vertices and displays two identical chordal
lengths, 5mm in our example.
Double-click on one chordal length value
in the geometry area to access the Parameter Definition dialog
box. For example, enter 50mm and click OK.
Click the
icon
at the right of the Points box to define a fillet with variable
width at the intermediate points you specify.
Select a point and set 30 as its radius
value.
Select one of the two planes cutting
the edge.
Double-click the chordal length at the
plane. For example, enter 20mm.
Select OK.
You can select the Conic parameter check
box options which allow you to vary the section of the fillet.
For a parameter comprised
between or equal to:
- 0.5, the
resulting curve is a parabola.
- 0 < parameter
< 0.5, the resulting curve is an arc of an ellipse.
- 0.5 < parameter
< 1, the resulting curve is a hyperbola.
Conical fillets do
not handle twist configurations. If a twist is detected, the
fillet operation fails.
If the fillet surface
curvature is lower than the support curvature, fillet surface
relimitation may fail. In such cases, the conic parameter has
to be decreased.
To edit this fillet, double-click
the fillet in the specification tree. Click More to
access the Limiting elements option.
Click
, then
select the place you want to use as the trimming element in the geometry.
If needed, click the arrow to reverse
the direction and therefore specify the portion of material that will
be kept.
Click OK.
The variable radius fillet is trimmed to the point you have selected.
The final fillet looks like this: