Originally Posted by: mitchb To unbend go to the Explorers Entities tab and right-click on the bend. In the drop-down menu click on remove feature. If you just want to change the angle, enter the change in the angle data box in either the inspector or the data window.
That advice only stands if the part has been bent in PunchCAD and the bend parameters take no account of the material or processing, so it won't be accurate to sheet metal production standards. If it's an import from another app, there are no bend features to edit, flattening a sheet metal design in PunchCAD means identifying the bends, finding the neutral depth, measuring the arc length of the bend at that depth and establishing the start, middle and end of the bend material. It's not difficult, but the only concession to automation is the arc length measurement.
I'm a long-time user of TurboCAD as well as PunchCAD, and TC first introduced unbending perhaps ten or eleven years ago. Like PunchCAD, the end-product of TC's development goes into the next version release rather than a service release. The first TC efforts were usable, and credit to them for that, but the usability was conditional, so you had to design with the foibles in mind, or edit to take them into account when you used the unbend tool. A lot of users thought that wasn't OK, and grumbled. I chose to take the half-full view rather than the half-empty, which is to consider that for the upgrade price (or the standard price of entry) of the new release, I got a new tool, rather than condemning the publishers for a release with "sheet metal" features that weren't comparable with formal tools that more expensive apps offered. The unbend tool improved incrementally, development to the standard of a "sheet metal" suite took place over nine years, by my reckoning, and they still don't call the tools a "sheet metal" suite. That's probably a "small target" philosophy, because they refer only to the "neutral depth" of the bend. There's nothing referring to "k-factor" anywhere, you do have to know enough to correlate the two. Because of that, and because it's a no-fanfare built-in feature, any critics predisposed to dismiss it in comparison to their fave SW/Alibre/BricsCAD/whatever plug-in or add-on would find it very hard to get past the bang-for-buck.
I don't know if Shark would be coming to the party too late, but Tim and Encore would probably have to crunch some numbers to decide if building in unbend is worth the development cost, and if they offered it as a "sheet metal" plug-in, or built it into PowerPack, would it increase custom through those avenues? As a new feature for SharkCAD Pro, it would probably be justifiable, but if it were to be called a "sheet metal tool", it would have to be full-featured at the outset. I could use PowerPackPro's unroll to semi-automate sheet metal, but TC's unbend is mature automation at this point.
Edited by user Sunday, March 11, 2018 5:35:08 AM(UTC)
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