Grasshopper

algorithmic modeling for Rhino

Hi Tom,

First of all thanks for your great plug-in. I am trying to use it to blend two surfaces of a section of an airplane wing. Each section contains a different curve for the geometry describing the airfoil. I have the two surfaces set at a fixed distance and I need to blend these two in order to close the wing section. 

I am posting some images to help you visualize what is the problem and hopefully we can get to a solution.

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Also I tryed moving the surface farther away and this is what I get.

It seems that it is failing to recognize where the actual surface is.

See images bellow

Thanks again

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Your icon image shows what appears to be an airplane using the joined wing design concept. This type of design was invented and patented by a former neighbor of mine, Julian Wolkovitch. Boeing looked at this concept but for some reason never continued beyond making some preliminary drawings.

Solving your problem would be much easier if you posted your GH file here.

Here's a very simple/incorrect approach that might help you.

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Hi Birk

Thanks for you reply. I took a look at your script but the problem is that I need to create straight wiglets, you will have a better idea of what I am talking about once you take a look at my script. 

I am attaching my GH file. It is a bit messy but take a look at the final part of it when I am trying to blend the wing with the wiglets. 

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Well I may be totally off in left field here, but I just plugged in a ruled surface and the results look pretty good to me.

You do have nice looking airfoils - congrats for that.

Hi Birk 

That looks great!! did you have luck joining all the surfaces now? 

COuld you please share your GH file with me to learn how you did it

thanks again for ur support

For some reason when I try to loft the two curves it gives me a Null result

JK didnt read about the ruled surface...

It works great!!!

Thanks Birk

Happy to help - I haven't seen airfoil shapes in a long time, so it was nice to find some again. I have no idea why the GH Loft function failed but the Ruled Surface worked. When I was working with wing shapes (DC-10 & F-4) wings were simple ruled surfaces, so that was my first guess on how to solve your problem.

Birk that worked nicely!!

but now I am facing another challenge. 

I currently have 3 surfaces (main wing, winglet and transition) sections and when I try to join them to create one polysurface GH fails to do so. 

I have tried using the Join Brep command, the Solid Union comand and the FaceMerge command but none of them seem to be working.

Thanks again

I don't mean to sound sarcastic, but...welcome to the real world. Since I am just a 3D printing hobbyist I have done very few designs with multiple parts. However I have encountered exactly the same problem you describe. A couple of times I was able to merge multiple parts by using the Rhino menu Solid/Create Solid command. But in most cases I was simply unable to find a way to output a single solid object.

In my case, since my Rhino output is an STL file, I was almost always able to fix the resulting STL file with other software. I expect that's not going to work for you. A couple of times I had to redesign things in GH to end up with printable results. I understand this approach is not workable for you either.

You could try exporting from Rhino in some standard 3D format that could then be taken into some other 3D design package and fixed up there. The top 2 that I know of are Solidworks and Catia, both of which are really expensive.

Alternatively you could internalize your Rhino data into your GH file, post it here, and ask for help. There are a number of true GH wizards here who seem to be able to solve most any problem. I am a long way from being that skillful.

Hi Tom

I am posting a file with the rhino version of the baked surfaces and the GH I am using to create the wing. It is a bit messy but I am sure you will understand. The main problem I am facing is to blend two different airfoils (2 different curves) one for the wing the other for the winglet. since the wing airfoil needs to have canver, for lift purposes and the winglet needs to be symmetric for stability. 

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