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About Constructing Solids and


Surfaces From 2D Geometry

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Applies to AutoCAD 2014

You can construct solids and surfaces by extruding, sweeping, lofting, and
revolving.

Methods for Constructing Surfaces or Solids From


Other Geometry
When you extrude, sweep, loft, and revolve curves, you can create both solids and
surfaces.

English

Apr 10 2013

Open curves always create surfaces, but closed curves can create either solids or
surfaces depending on certain settings.
If you select a closed curve and extrude, sweep, loft, or revolve an object, you
create:
A solid if the Mode option is set to Solid.
A surface if the Mode option is set to Surface.

About Surfaces Based on Other Objects


The type of surface depends on additional settings. For example, you create
A procedural surface if the SURACEMODELINGMODE system variable is set to 0.
A NURBS surface if the SURFACEMODELINGMODE system variable is set to 1.
An associative surface if the SURFACEASSOCIATIVITY system variable is on.
In this illustration, the same profile creates a solid (left), a procedural surface
(middle), and a NURBS surface (right).

About Solids Based on Other Objects


You can also create 3D solids from 2D geometry or other 3D objects. For example,
a 3D solid can also be the result of extruding a 2D shape to follow a specified path
in 3D space.

The following methods are available:

Sweep. Extends a 2D object along a path.


Extrusion. Extends the shape of a 2D object in a perpendicular direction into 3D
space.

Revolve. Sweeps a 2D object around an axis.


Loft. Extends the contours of a shape between one or more open or closed
objects.

Slice. Divides a solid object into two separate 3D objects.


Sculpting Surfaces. Converts and trims a group of surfaces that enclose a
watertight area into a solid.

Conversion. Converts mesh objects and planar objects with thickness into solids
and surfaces.

Geometry That Can Be Used As Profiles and Guide


Curves
The curves that you use as profile and guide curves when you extrude, sweep, loft,
and revolve can be:
Open or closed
Planar or non-planar
Solid and surface edges
A single object (to extrude multiple lines, convert them to a single object with the
JOIN command)
A single region (to extrude multiple regions, convert them to a single object with
the REGION command)

Example: Use Splines to Create 3D NURBS Surfaces


Splines are one of the many 2D object types that can be lofted, extruded, swept,
and revolved to create NURBS surfaces. Other 2D objects that can be used include
lines, polylines, arcs, and circles. Splines, however, are the only 2D object
customized to create NURBS surfaces. Because they allow you to adjust tolerance,
degree, and tangency, they are better suited than other types of 2D profiles (such
as lines, polylines, and circles) for surface modeling.

Many of the same commands used with NURBS surfaces, can also be used with CV
splines.

Create Associative Surfaces


Surfaces can be associative while solids cannot. If surface associativity is on when a
surface is created, the surface maintains a relationship with the curve from which it
is was generated (even if the curve is the subobject of another solid or surface). If
the curve is reshaped, the surface profile is also updated.
Note To modify a surface that is associative, you must modify the generating curve

and not the surface itself. If you reshape the surface, its link to the generating curve
will be broken and the surface will lose associativity and become a generic surface.

Deleting the Curves that Generate the Solid or Surface


The DELOBJ system variable controls whether the curves that generate an object
are automatically deleted after the solid or surface is created. However, if surface
associativity is on, the DELOBJ setting is ignored and the generating curves are not
deleted.
Related Tasks
To Create a NURBS Surface by Extruding
(http://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/autocad/learn-

explore/caas/documentation/ACD/2014/ENU/files/GUID-A2C0A192-6F78-44AC9089-E91449193916-htm.html)
To Create a 3D Solid by Extruding
(http://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/autocad/learnexplore/caas/documentation/ACD/2014/ENU/files/GUID-B3B99AC4-B137-4144A5ED-A8167906172D-htm.html)
To Create a Procedural Surface by Extruding Along a Path
(http://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/autocad/learnexplore/caas/documentation/ACD/2014/ENU/files/GUID-CEF4A0A5-904B-412CAEB6-1F2CDBD6CD41-htm.html)
To Create a Solid by Sweeping an Object Along a Path
(http://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/autocad/learnexplore/caas/documentation/ACD/2014/ENU/files/GUID-34A06CBE-653E-49CEA70D-BEF717C1AF79-htm.html)
To Create a Surface by Sweeping an Object Along a Path
(http://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/autocad/learnexplore/caas/documentation/ACD/2014/ENU/files/GUID-B8602691-44FA-48B3B3B3-4CDB1F7A1853-htm.html)
To Create a NURBS Surface by Conversion and Lofting
(http://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/autocad/learnexplore/caas/documentation/ACD/2014/ENU/files/GUID-D745EDE9-6BC7-425C88F4-8E235F74500E-htm.html)
To Create a Solid by Lofting Through a Set of Cross-section Profiles
(http://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/autocad/learnexplore/caas/documentation/ACD/2014/ENU/files/GUID-A329664E-28C0-477AB6F6-F2E4E25901F4-htm.html)
To Modify a Lofted Solid or Surface by Changing the Surface Normal Settings
(http://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/autocad/learnexplore/caas/documentation/ACD/2014/ENU/files/GUID-B330A5DE-DDFB-4EDB89AE-25563B1840F2-htm.html)
To Revolve Objects About an Axis to Create a NURBS Surface
(http://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/autocad/learnexplore/caas/documentation/ACD/2014/ENU/files/GUID-8E3B4469-8C63-4999843E-6EA5E272E079-htm.html)
To Revolve Objects About an Axis to Create a Solid
(http://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/autocad/learnexplore/caas/documentation/ACD/2014/ENU/files/GUID-36BDF296-1501-4F679AA6-48BB8E4B7D77-htm.html)

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