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				From the Loads section
					of the action bar, click Force
					 .Optional:  
  Enter a descriptive 
	 Name. 
   
 
		   Select the geometry supports in the model. 
		   
		  A force can be applied to one or more points or faces. If you
			 select a model face, the force is distributed evenly across the surface. 
			 You can also select a coupling connection, rigid
				body, or rigid surface; the force is applied to the reference point for the
				feature. 
		  
				Enter the magnitude component for each direction of the local feature triad
						(Force X, Force Y, and
						Force Z). 
				For a cylindrical local axis system, the X-, Y- and Z-components are the R-, 
						
					-, and Z-coordinates, respectively. 
				Select an axis system and an axis.
				| Option | Description | 
|---|
 
						| Global | Aligns the local feature triad with the global coordinate
							system. |  
						| Local | Aligns the local feature triad with a selected axis system in the
							model. If you select this axis system, you must also specify whether the
							axis system is Cartesian or
								Cylindrical. |  
						| Specify | Allows you to orient the local feature triad directly. Right-click
							the feature triad glyph on the model to orient the local feature
							triad. |  
						| Implicit | Aligns the axis system to the transformed axis system applied on the
							support. | 
				Optional: Enter a Scale factor. 
				A scale factor is a multiplier used to scale the magnitude values.
				 
		  Optional: Specify an 
			 Amplitude and 
			 Phase angle. 
		   
		  The amplitude curve defines the magnitude of the feature during the step. The phase
					angle for the amplitude curve determines the real (in-phase) and imaginary
					(out-of-phase) parts of the magnitude. A phase angle of 0º indicates a value
					with no imaginary component.   Note:
			Phase angles are available only for a
						harmonic response simulation step.  
		   Click 
			 OK. 
		   
		
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