CAD2D - D3 - User Coordinate System Pada Autodesk Inventor
CAD2D - D3 - User Coordinate System Pada Autodesk Inventor
CAD2D - D3 - User Coordinate System Pada Autodesk Inventor
UCS (user coordinate system) is a collection of work features (three workplanes, three axes,
and a center point).
Unlike Origin, there can be multiple UCS in a document, and you can place and orient them
differently.
When you create or modify objects in a 3D environment (not available in Inventor LT), you
can move and reorient the UCS in 3D model space to simplify your work.
Work features in UCS can be used to place sketches and features that update when the
UCS is redefined.
In a part file, you can position UCS relatively to existing geometry by selecting three points,
or relatively to the Origin.
Point (vertex of solid edge, midpoint of solid edge, sketch, or work point origin)
Solid circular edge or solid elliptical edge
In an assembly file (not available in Inventor LT), you can position UCS relatively to the
Origin but you cannot position UCS relatively to existing geometry. When placing UCS in an
assembly, you can select a point, but the UCS is still placed in absolute coordinates and not
related to the point!
You can use UCS for measurements, and its work geometry can be included in the drawing.
The UCS triad can be selected for the View Face command.
Specify a new origin (one point), new X axis (two points), or new XY plane (three points).
Align the UCS by selecting a face on a 3D solid object. The selection can be on a face or
on an edge of the solid.
Rotate the current UCS around any of its three major axes.
UCS browser
UCS triad is represented with a triad icon in the browser. Similar to the Origin, the UCS node
owns its work geometry nodes.
If you place multiple occurrences of a UCS, they are incrementally numbered and displayed
in the order they were inserted. In a part file, drag to reorder them in the browser.
Set the default UCS prefix in the UCS Settings dialog box. You cannot change the name of
UCS work features (center point, planes, axes), their names are dependent on the UCS
name.
If you position UCS relatively to existing part geometry, Show Inputs option is available in the
context menu.Click to highlight the geometry from which UCS was created.
Finish
Inserts UCS in the specified location. When selecting geometry placement, select
origin, X axis, and Y axis to place UCS.
Restart
Restarts the UCS command.
Done [Esc]
Cancels the UCS command, no UCS is inserted.
Back
Reverses the most recent selection.
Click the arrowhead to move the UCS triad along the axis.
Click the axis to rotate the triad around the selected axis. Or, specify a point for XY
plane when selecting part geometry.
Use the TAB key to move between boxes where you set the values for UCS coordinates, or
angle of rotation.
When you place UCS absolutely and UCS faces the same direction as global axis, Heads Up
Display coordinate values for UCS origin are absolute. Heads Up Display rotation values are
relative to the current UCS orientation, and start with the zero value.
When you redefine UCS positioned relatively to existing geometry, Heads Up Display
coordinate values for are absolute.
UCS parameters
Each UCS defines six parameters - three positional coordinates, and three coordinates to
drive the rotation angles.
If you place UCS on existing geometry, the coordinates and rotations are relative to the
target geometry, so after the initial placement, the parameter values are set to 0. If you
redefine the UCS to offset its position, the parameters reflect the relative transformation.
UCS visibility
Each of the UCS work features shows a visibility state in the browser.
Set the default visibility of UCS triad and its work features in the UCS Settings dialog box.
You can modify visibility of individual UCS work features independently.
You can also set the visibility of work features in your active part or assembly (not available
in Inventor LT)file. Select View tab Visibility panel Object Visibility . For UCS, you can
set visibility to UCS triad, UCS planes, UCS axes, and UCS points.
You can position a UCS relative to the origin or to existing geometry, align sketch
geometry with a UCS, measure the distance of a UCS, redefine a UCS, or specify UCS
document settings.
You can select the UCS triad as an input for 2D Sketch command. You can also use the
UCS work features for 2D Sketch.
The origin of the sketch is aligned with the UCS center point, and the center point is
projected to the sketch.
If the UCS position changes (either because its parameters or target geometry changed,
or because the UCS was redefined), the sketch is updated.
Measure Distance of a UCS
If a part or assembly file contains a UCS, the Measure Distance dialog box offers UCS
options in its menu.
Redefine a UCS
1. Do either of the following:
Double-click the UCS.
Select UCS, right-click, and choose Redefine Feature.
2. Do any of the following:
Specify the UCS position relatively to the Origin, or, in a part file, also relative to
the existing geometry.
Click the UCS triad origin and move the UCS to a new location.
Click the axis to rotate the triad around the selected axis.
Click the arrowhead to move the triad along the selected axis.
Every part and assembly file has reference planes; they are hidden work planes that
intersect at the origin of the XYZ coordinates.
The work planes and a center point are listed under the Origin icon in the browser. You
can display any of these work planes and use them to construct features. You can make
your part symmetrical about the reference planes and center point.
When the reference planes are set to display, they are visible in both wireframe and
shaded displays. To resize a reference plane, pause over one of its edges until the Move
or Drag symbol appears, then drag a corner to resize it or drag one of its edges to move
it. To sketch on a reference plane, select it and then click Sketch.
You can create sketches and construct features anywhere in the graphics window, but
most parts require a reference point in space. It can be arbitrary, but it is established so
that all features update relative to that point. For example, you can set the center point at
the intersection of the reference planes and position it with a Fix constraint or use the
Project Geometry command to project the center point onto the sketch plane.
Select a reference plane to display, then right-click and select Visibility from the menu.
To resize a reference plane, hover over a corner to show the Resize symbol, then drag a
corner.
To move a reference plane, hover over an edge to show the Move symbol, then drag an
edge.
Note: Click the Sketch command, and then click a reference plane to set it as the sketch
plane.
A hidden center point exists at the intersection of the reference planes. To position
sketches relative to the part origin, click SketchDraw and use the Project Geometry
command to project the center point onto the sketch plane.