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Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
Team 74 has made a full assembly of our frame and in this assembly we trimed a peice tube with the "cut" extrusion. This was done in the actual assembly not in the part its self.
So my question is this: Can we then apply this extrusion so that it shows up in our part's drawing? Thanks |
Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
I believe if you edit the piece in the assembly, it will ask you when you save the assembly if you wish to save the parts of the assembly as well, so any changes you made should get saved there if you click yes. I may be wrong, I'm not the best at inventor, but I'm pretty sure.
anyone confirm? |
Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
Have you saved the file? Closed everything out? And reopened the drawing?
Sometimes the computer has trouble processing updates in that direction. Try what I mentioned above and then respond back. If that doesn't work, I will get back with you as soon as I can. |
Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
When you sketch the new sketch on the part you dimension the sketch. Then you turn on the visability of the dimensions on on the end of the sketch.
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Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
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Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
http://home.pct.edu/~jmather/AU2006/MA13-3%20Mather.pdf
Tip #95 Make sure you know which environment you are working in assembley/part. You must make the cut at the part level if that is where you want it - just like the real world. |
Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
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It will not show up when you open the part or when you make a drawing of the part. When creating machinery, part drawings are created to manufacture the parts as they appear prior to assembly. An assembly drawing will show the parts assembled and any subsequent modifications that would need to be made AFTER the parts are assembled. For example: it would be common to "drill and pin at assembly" - two or more parts would be assembled (and possibly adjusted) and then pinned in place. The drilled holes would not be shown in the part drawings showing how the parts are manufactured. |
Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
This is simple:
When you make the cut extrusion it will appear in the assembly and then when you hit "Save" or "Save as" on the assembly a window should pop up asking you if you want to save changes to the parts. If you click the button "yes to all" on the bottom then click "ok" on top, it should save any changes to the part you made in the assembly to the original part, sketch and all. If you need me to send you pictures i can screenshot this process. -John |
Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
John - an assembly feature will not make changes to individual part files. If you edit a specific part in the context of an assembly by making an extruded cut in the part THAT is different from making an ASSEMBLY feature.
As JD says: Pay attention to where you are making your edits. |
Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
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grsnovi: Just because it is not the "right way" of doing something does not make it the "wrong way", it just makes it a "different way". |
Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
Cutting and pasting the assembly sketch into the part and then creating a PART FEATURE will indeed provide you with a PART FEATURE - which is different from an ASSEMBLY FEATURE.
I am not making any statement about "right" or "wrong" - I was simply stating how features created in Inventor (at the assembly level) work. |
Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
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Copy and paste is whole 'nother ballgame. |
Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
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Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
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Re: Can you apply an assembly extrusion to a part?
I think that's the case JD. I re-read the whole thread and I believe I may have been part of the problem. I think the OP was simply saying that they had created an assembly feature by mistake - they really wanted a part feature. Along the way various folks seemed to be suggesting that you could somehow get a part feature from an assembly feature. I agree there are ways to recover from going down one road and then backing up to get where you need to go. I probably read the OP's question more literally than it was intended and possibly others who have chimed in have all been assuming different things as well.
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