the planes along the curves shifted axis all of a sudden. A perpendicular surface frame that is used as base for the circles seems to fix it. Not sure to be clear. I attached the definition.
Permalink Reply by WT4 on September 30, 2010 at 7:42am
You are encountering a phenomenon sometimes referred to as a gimball lock. It occurs when the angle of 90 degrees is approached. You will appreciate that the tan(89.999) is +infinity but then tan(90.001) is -infinity. This is the reason why the plane seems to flip over. The solution would be to ensure that in defining your planes, you keep the orientation within the -89.999 to +89.999 domain.
i figured it was something about the approach to 90 degrees, but didn't know what to do about it
seems like the perpendicular surface frame avoids that issue somehow.
i usually like to know why things work or don't but this one is beyond me as to why one component does and the other does not.