Looking for a Tutorial or Presentation on "Knurling"

Discussion in 'SolidWorks' started by kareninventress, Jun 28, 2006.

  1. Can someone here please tilt me in the right direction towards a
    Tutorial or a Power Point Presentation on the technique of knurling ?
    For some reason I cannot find any literature, anywhere on the subject,
    other than the ones listed in the Texture utility of Solidworks, which
    are much too blurry and of very poor quality. There certainly must be a
    technique whereby a sharp knurl can be modeled.
    I need to model a 1" round shaft, and also I need to model a pistol
    grip of a revolver. I am going to follow the assumption that the
    principle of modeling the two would be pretty much the same.
    More than several of us in my Solidworks Class, would be very grateful
    for any information you would be willing to share with us.
    Karen
     
    kareninventress, Jun 28, 2006
    #1
  2. kareninventress

    That70sTick Guest

    I model knurls as features as often as I model fastener threads: NEVER!
    Why burden your model with 100's (1000's?) of tiny surfaces and
    features? If the knurl cuts have helix geometry, this is a very large
    burden for such a feature.

    Typically for a knurl I model knurled surface at knurled diameter and
    use a cosmetic thread to denote knurled region and contain notes about
    knurl.
     
    That70sTick, Jun 28, 2006
    #2
  3. kareninventress

    kb Guest

    select surface, right click, appearance> texture> metal> machined> knurl
    texture. imho, not for use on drawings.
     
    kb, Jun 28, 2006
    #3
  4. kareninventress

    John Layne Guest

    That70sTick is right I would normally never model threads or knurls.

    However I did for job last year where I needed to make a rendering, as I
    couldn't get a good image using textures. I have uploaded 2 versions of the
    part to my website, you will notice the version with a modeled thread and a
    knurl is about 12 x larger in file size at 6mb.

    www.solidengineering.co.nz/help/ThumbScrews.zip

    John Layne
    www.solidengineering.co.nz
     
    John Layne, Jun 28, 2006
    #4
Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments (here). After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.