Working with a Bending Line Object on a PCB in Altium Designer

This document is no longer available beyond version 21. Information can now be found here: Bending Zone Definition for version 22

 

Parent page: PCB Design Objects

Rigid-Flex is under active development. To switch to Rigid-Flex 2 mode, enable the following options in the Advanced Settings dialog:

  • PCB.RigidFlex2.0 - enables the Rigid-Flex 2 features in Board Planning Mode. Note that in previous releases of Altium Designer this option was called Legacy.PCB.RigidFlex. The behavior has changed along with the name change; enabling the old option restored the old mode (Rigid-Flex1.0), whereas enabling the new option enables the new mode (Rigid-Flex2.0).
  • PCB.RigidFlex.SubstackPlanning - enables the Board view in the Layer Stack Manager.

Learn more about Rigid-Flex Design

 A board with multiple Bending Lines (shown as orange dashed lines) each defines the position and properties of a physical bend in a flexible region of the board. The orange band denotes the area that curves.
A board with multiple Bending Lines (shown as orange dashed lines) each defines the position and properties of a physical bend in a flexible region of the board. The orange band denotes the area that curves.

Summary

A Bending Line is a PCB object that defines the properties of a bend in a flexible region of a printed circuit board. When a Bending Line is placed across a Board Region it defines where and how that region should bend, including the bend angle and the radius of the bend. When the PCB is displayed in 3D Layout Mode the bends can be applied, providing a real-world view of the behavior of the rigid-flex design as it folds and unfolds.


A Bending Line is placed over the flexible region and configured so the board can fold 180 degrees.

Availability

Bending Lines are available in the PCB Editor when the View mode is set to Board Planning Mode (View » Board Planning Mode or press the 1 shortcut).

Placement

To place a Bending Line:

  1. Select View » Board Planning Mode (or press the 1 shortcut) to enter Board Planning Mode.
  2. Select Place » Define Bending Line from the main menus, or click the  button on the Active Bar.
  3. A Bending Line is placed over the required Board Region, it does not attach to it (Bending Lines are associated with one or more Board Regions by the Stack Regions property). Click near the edge of the Board Region to define the Bending Line start location.
  4. Move the cursor to the required end location and click to place the Bending Line. Note that at least one end of the Bending Line must touch or cross the boundary of the Board Region that it applies to.
  5. You remain in Bending Line placement mode, ready to place another Bending Line if required. If not, right-click or press Esc to exit Bending Line placement mode.
  6. Select the Bending Line and in the Properties panel, configure the:
    1. Radius
    2. Bend Angle
    3. Stack Regions (only required if there are multiple Board Regions under the Bending Line - enable only those regions that this bend applies to)
    4. Fold Index (only required if you need to control the order that multiple bends are applied to your board, the bend with the lowest Fold Index value is applied first)

During placement of a Bending Line, the cursor is constrained by the cursor snap settings, which include: the current Snap Grid, the available Objects for Snapping, the presence of Workspace Guides, and the Axes Snapping settings - use these features to help achieve the required shape.

Learn more about Understanding the Snap Behavior.

Graphical Editing

A Bending Line can be graphically edited by manipulating the vertices at each end of the line, using a select and drag method.

Moving a Bending Line

  1. Select View » Board Planning Mode (or press the 1 shortcut) to enter Board Planning Mode.
  2. Click and hold on the vertex at either end of the Bending Line, then drag that vertex to the required location and release the mouse button. The cursor will be constrained to the current cursor snap settings, press Ctrl+E to change the settings as you work.
  3. The bend location will be redefined by the Bending Line's new position.

 Select and drag a Bending Line vertex to change the Bending Line's position on the board - the cursor will be constrained by the current cursor snap settings.
Select and drag a Bending Line vertex to change the Bending Line's position on the board - the cursor will be constrained by the current cursor snap settings.

Deleting a Bending Line

  1. Select View » Board Planning Mode (or press the 1 shortcut) to enter Board Planning Mode.
  2. Click and hold on one of its vertices to select the Bending Line, then press the Delete key.
If attempting to graphically modify an object that has its Locked property enabled, a dialog will appear asking for confirmation to proceed with the edit. Click the locked object to select it then disable the Locked property in the Properties panel to graphically edit the object.

Non-Graphical Editing

Properties page: Bending Line Properties

This method of editing uses the Bend mode of the Properties panel to modify the properties of a Bending Line object.

The Bending Line mode of the Properties panel
The Bending Line mode of the Properties panel

After placement, the Bend mode of the Properties panel can be accessed in one of the following ways:

  • If the Properties panel is already active, select the Bending Line object.
  • After selecting the Bending Line object, select the Properties panel from the Panels button at the bottom right of the design space or select View » Panels » Properties from the main menus.
If the Double Click Runs Interactive Properties option is disabled (default) on the PCB Editor – General page of the Preferences dialog, when the primitive is double-clicked or you right-click on a selected primitive then choose Properties, the dialog will open. When the Double Click Runs Interactive Properties option is enabled, the Properties panel will open.
Press Ctrl+Q to toggle the units of measurement currently used in the dialog/panel between metric (mm) and imperial (mil). This only affects the display of measurements in the dialog/panel; it does not change the measurement unit specified for the board, which is configured in the Units setting in the Properties panel when there are no objects selected in the design space.
If you find an issue, select the text/image and pressCtrl + Enterto send us your feedback.
Note

The features available depend on your Altium product access level. Compare features included in the various levels of Altium Designer Software Subscription and functionality delivered through applications provided by the Altium 365 platform.

If you don’t see a discussed feature in your software, contact Altium Sales to find out more.

Content