πͺοΈ Lesson 3-5: Sweep and Loft
Create smooth, flowing, and custom 3D forms by sweeping profiles along paths and blending multiple cross-sections.
π What Youβll Learn
By the end of this lesson, youβll be able to:
- Use the SWEEP command to extrude shapes along paths
- Use the LOFT command to create solids between multiple profiles
- Understand when to use Sweep vs. Loft for organic or linear designs
- Control twist, scale, and alignment during solid generation
- Visualize and modify swept and lofted objects
π§° Tools Youβll Use
| Tool / Command | Description |
|---|---|
| SWEEP | Projects a profile along a path to create a 3D solid or surface |
| LOFT | Generates a 3D solid between two or more shapes |
| PATH | Guiding line or curve used in Sweep |
| ALIGN / UCS | Ensures profile orientation along path |
| 3DORBIT / VIEW | Rotate and visualize created forms |
β Why It Matters
SWEEP and LOFT allow for the creation of highly custom and complex 3D formsβsuch as handrails, pipes, handles, ducts, or organic contoursβthat canβt be built easily using basic extrusions or revolutions. These tools are essential for both mechanical parts and architectural modeling with smooth transitions and flowing geometry.
π Sweep vs. Loft Comparison
| Feature | SWEEP | LOFT |
|---|---|---|
| Base Shape | Single profile | Multiple profiles |
| Guide | Requires a path (line, arc, spline) | No path required (optional guides) |
| Output | Solid or surface | Solid or surface |
| Ideal For | Pipes, rails, wires | Shoes, sculptures, smooth transitional forms |
| Extras | Control twist, scale along path | Add guide curves for precision |
π§ Using the Commands
SWEEP Example
- Draw a 2D closed profile (e.g., circle or rectangle)
- Create a 2D or 3D path (line, polyline, arc, spline)
- Type
SWEEP, select the profile, then the path - Result: The profile is extruded along the path
π‘ You can use 3D polylines, splines, or helixes for paths!
LOFT Example
- Draw at least two closed profiles (e.g., two different ellipses)
- Type
LOFT, select profiles in order - Optionally, add guide curves or path curves
- Press Enter β the lofted solid blends between profiles
π‘ Loft is ideal when shapes vary from one end to another!
π οΈ Practice Activity
Objective: Model a decorative table leg using Loft and a pipe using Sweep.
Instructions:
Part 1: Lofted Table Leg
- Draw three concentric profiles (e.g., large circle, mid taper, small foot) on vertical planes
- Use
LOFTto connect them smoothly - Rotate model using
3DORBIT
Part 2: Swept Pipe
- Draw a circle (pipe cross-section)
- Draw a curving spline as a 3D path
- Use
SWEEPto extrude the circle along the spline - Change visual style to
REALISTIC
π οΈ Best Practices
| Tip | Why Itβs Useful |
|---|---|
| Keep profiles perpendicular to path (Sweep) | Ensures smooth and correct orientation |
| Use consistent alignment (Loft) | Prevents twisted or unexpected geometry |
| Use guide curves (Loft) | Adds control for asymmetrical or irregular lofting |
| Clean geometry | Close shapes and avoid duplicates to ensure clean modeling |
πΊοΈ Visualizing and Editing
| Tool | Use |
|---|---|
3DORBIT | Rotate to check flow and alignment |
SECTIONPLANE | Analyze cross-sections of the solid |
SLICE | Cut object for part inspection or visualization |
PROPERTIES | View and edit sweep twist angle or loft settings |
π Quick Review
| Command | Description |
|---|---|
| SWEEP | Moves a 2D profile along a path to create a 3D solid |
| LOFT | Blends between multiple profiles to create complex forms |
| PATH | Required for SWEEP, optional for LOFT |
| GUIDES | Optional for LOFT, to control shape transition |
| UCS | Aligns your view and drawing planes |