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#1
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ProE Assembly Editing
Can any one help me on the following.
I have an assembly made in ProE 2001. Can I just make changes to the assembly alone ? I do not want any change to its associated part files and drawing files. Is there any special method to do this ? |
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#2
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Re: ProE Assembly Editing
There are several ways of going about this:
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#3
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Re: ProE Assembly Editing
Thanks yar.
I am now confident I go ahead. Thanks a lot. May come back for future probs !!! |
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#4
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Re: ProE Assembly Editing
Let me get this out of my system.
DO NOT USE ASSEMBLY CUTS OR FEATURES IN PRO/E They cause all sorts of reference issues and if you select the wrong options when creating them you can cause all sorts of problems. This is more of an issue when multiple people are working on an assembly but the consequences are sitll the same. This is the easiest way to cause a cicular reference and should only be done as a last resort. Now that I've had my soap box speech what type of feature you want to create really drive how you should do this. Make sure to not check the modify part option when when making an assy cut if you don't want it to effect individual parts, this is where the the references that cause issues get created. The reason I suggest not doing this is from personal past history of large assemblies crashing from circular refs. The problem is not the commands but the inability of most people to use them properly. If you are are careful and read all the prompts you won't have any probelms. I still however never let designers or other engineers working on my program do this. Pete |
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#5
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Re: ProE Assembly Editing
Quote:
If you're going to be putting the parts in other assemblies, definitely treat it like the second case, or the third case (if you're very careful about what assemblies it will belong to). If you're going to leave it all in one assembly, occasional use of the assembly cut should be fine--but it isn't intended to replace individual part features. I would avoid other sorts of assembly features, if they aren't sensibly grounded in either design or manufacturing intent. Most importantly, whichever technique is used, good practices should always be followed when choosing references: don't pick features that are prone to disappearing or changing, as the model evolves; try to use as few references as possible to constrain the sketch; avoid references on separate models in an assembly, if a single model will do (mostly for Insert Feature). In short, "never" is probably too strong, but if in doubt, you can still take the safer route, and modify the underlying model. With a little experience in choosing references, you shouldn't have too much trouble making a good decision. |
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#6
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Re: ProE Assembly Editing
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My feeling is that if do not have an appreciation for the full implications of assembly cuts or features you should not use the function because of PRO/E's inherent parametric referencing. These problems all get magnified when you have multiple users working on assemblies and subassemblies who don't know how all the parts were modeled. To sum up if you have multiple people using your models are don't realize the full extent of PRO/E's parametric referencing using this feature is a bad idea. If you're just trying to do a quick and dirty FIRST drawing with no configuration control it probably won hurt you. Pete |
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