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  #1 (permalink)  
Old June 21st, 2007, 12:52 PM
amnon amnon is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Poland
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Default Assembly

Hej,

Until now I draw a PARTs and I put it into Assembly module. My friend advised me to create PARTs directly in Assembly module. It might delimit use of CONSTRAINTS, but if I need to change anything, all parts collaps. Show me some benefits of this method.

Best Regards
Amnon
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  #2 (permalink)  
Old June 21st, 2007, 05:20 PM
MrCATIA MrCATIA is offline
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Default Either way is OK

Either method is OK and both work. The best approach is to probably do some of each. Does your company have a preferred standard method?

Creating the Parts first and then assembling them into a Product is called "bottom-up" design. A disadvantage is when you work on an individual part you don't have the other parts available for reference.

Creating the Parts within a Product is called "top-down" or "contextual design". An advantage is you can design parts based on other parts. Another advantage is creating associative links between mating parts (although this could cause problems if you don't know (or pay attention to) what you're doing). This also requires that the parts designed in the context of the Product assembly should also be modified in the context of the same assembly.

If you look closely at the Product tree showing all the instances of Parts, you will see that the icons in front of the Parts have different symbols with different colored gears (yellow, green, brown, white) which indicates that you are "designing in context."

Both methods require the use of assembly Constraints to position the parts with respect to each other. I'm not sure why the constraints are causing your parts to "collapse" - unless you are editing or renaming them?

Using Publications would probably help avoid some of the constraint problems.

Last edited by MrCATIA; June 22nd, 2007 at 10:40 AM..
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  #3 (permalink)  
Old June 22nd, 2007, 12:35 PM
amnon amnon is offline
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Default

Thank's a lot MrCATIA
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