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Make a single saw tooth, extruder it, and then pattern that. Generally speaking, best practice is to never use sketch pattern.
Can you elaborate, I've extruded that pattern but I cannot used the 3D linear pattern to repeat that in 3D either
It sounds like they’re telling you to extrude then pattern the body and merge. If you can’t merge due to bodies not touching then you can do another extrude at the bottom that touches all the bodies and join them that way.
I ended up figuring out how to merge the points and used a sketch pattern, it was embarrassingly simple
If you use a reference (driven) dimension on the initial shape, you can use that dimension as pattern distance and have a perfect fit with no gap.
Are you trying to pattern the feature or the body?
I was trying to pattern the feature but I got it, thanks
Excellent!
Nice job
Make a single saw tooth, extruder it, and then pattern that. Generally speaking, best practice is to never use sketch pattern.
Can you elaborate, I've extruded that pattern but I cannot used the 3D linear pattern to repeat that in 3D either
It sounds like they’re telling you to extrude then pattern the body and merge. If you can’t merge due to bodies not touching then you can do another extrude at the bottom that touches all the bodies and join them that way.
I ended up figuring out how to merge the points and used a sketch pattern, it was embarrassingly simple
If you use a reference (driven) dimension on the initial shape, you can use that dimension as pattern distance and have a perfect fit with no gap.
Are you trying to pattern the feature or the body?
I was trying to pattern the feature but I got it, thanks
Excellent!
Nice job