Combine several surfaces into one

The Combine Surfaces tool allows you to combine several surfaces into one surface as long as the combined outer boundary of all the surfaces has exactly four sides.Combine Surface does not work on trimmed surfaces.

How the tool works

  1. Combine Surfaces fits four curves to each of the four outer boundaries of the set of surfaces you selected.
  2. Then, it places a simple surface, of the degree you selected in the option box, within those four curves.
  3. The tool samples the interior of all the selected surfaces and modifies the surface to match those samples.
  4. If the surface doesn’t match well enough, Combine Surface inserts isoparametric curves into the simple surface to allow for finer adjustments to the shape.
  5. If you selected continuity with boundary surfaces, Combine Surface samples those surfaces as well, and increases the samples along the outer boundaries of the original surfaces.

Combine several surfaces into one new surface

  1. In the Surfaces tool palette, select the Combine Surfaces tool, or right-click the Surface tab and select Combine Surface.

  2. Pick the surfaces you want to combine.

    • As you add surfaces, the surface boundaries change color. Green means the current group of surfaces has a four-sided boundary and can be combined. Yellow means they cannot be combined.
    • When the surfaces can be combined, an arrow appears showing the normal of the new surface. Click the arrow to reverse the normal of the new surface.
  3. When you have picked all the surfaces you want to combine and the boundary is green, click Go.

  4. The system prompts you to click the edges that must be continuous with adjacent surfaces.

    • Click a green boundary line to mark it for tangency with adjacent surfaces. A label appears on the boundary.
    • Click the label to change the continuity type. Each click cycles through positional (pos), tangent (tan), and curvature (cur).
  5. Click Go.

Tips and notes