Can I use the ʼRevolveʼ command to make a sphere-like shape in Rhinoceros 3D?

Short Answer

Yes — in Rhino 3D, you can use the Revolve command to create a sphere-like shape by revolving a semicircle around its diameter, which is the most common professional method for accurate rotational solids. This works well for true spheres and smooth round forms. Limitation: the profile must be clean and correctly aligned to the axis.

What You Need to Know Before

Warning: If your curve does not touch the revolve axis exactly at both ends, Rhino may create an open surface or an invalid polysurface instead of a closed solid. A slightly off-axis profile is one of the most common real modeling failures here.

How to Use Revolve to Make a Sphere-Like Shape

  • Command: Revolve

  • Shortcut: _Revolve

  • Quick Steps:

    1. Draw a semicircle profile with Curve > Arc > Semicircle or use Circle and trim it to a half-circle.
    2. Run Revolve, then select the semicircle and define the revolve axis using the diameter line through the flat side of the profile.
    3. Set the angle to 360 and enable the Solid=Yes option if available from the command line, then press Enter to create the sphere.

Variables & Settings

  • Key Setting: Solid=Yes
    Expert Setting: This option tells Rhino to cap the result where possible and create a closed solid instead of only a surface. For a true sphere from a proper semicircle, this helps ensure you get a valid closed polysurface.

Why it Fails

  • Cause 1 (Geometry): The profile is not a true semicircle, so the revolved result becomes only sphere-like, not a true sphere.
  • Cause 2 (layers/Locks): The curve or axis object is on a locked layer, preventing proper selection during the Revolve command.
  • Cause 3 (Command/Logic): The axis is placed incorrectly, such as outside the diameter, which creates a torpedo or egg-shaped form instead of a sphere.

Quick Fix & Best Practice

  • Quick Fix: Use End object snap to place the revolve axis exactly on the two endpoints of the semicircle’s diameter before completing Revolve.
  • Manager’s Verdict: Use Revolve whenever the shape is rotationally symmetric — it is the fastest and cleanest professional workflow for spheres and similar solids in Rhino. Avoid it if the form is asymmetrical or needs freeform control.

FAQ

Can I make a perfect sphere in Rhino with Revolve?
Yes, if you revolve a true semicircle 360 degrees around its diameter.

Is Sphere better than Revolve for this task?
Yes, for a basic sphere, the Sphere command is faster, but Revolve is better when matching a custom profile workflow.

Why do I get a surface instead of a solid?
Your profile or axis setup is likely incorrect, or the result is not being capped as a closed form.

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