How to model massive assemblies
The UGS Velocity Series software for the mid-market includes Solid Edge, NX CAM Express for generating toolpaths, Femap for FEA, and Teamcenter Express for collaboration. —Raymond Kurland
Each program is modular
and swaps data with the
others. Solid Edge V20
runs on Microsoft Vista,
adds more support for
64-bit processors, includes over 170 other new
enhancements, sports a
new Catia V5 bidirectional
translator, and imports
STL files for viewing.
Overall this is an impressive release. Many of the major modeling functions added to V20 focus on improving the ability to work with
massive assemblies (more than
100,000 parts). This is a tough
problem, often taxing the resources of even the fastest desktop processors. Solid Edge V20
has made substantial progress
in this area and now has leadingedge capabilities. A few of these
include:
Zones modeling, which improves performance by letting users define and work in small areas
of large assemblies, without opening the whole assembly. Zones,
thus, cut design time, speed
system performance, and make
working with massive assemblies
more manageable. Zones are created several ways. For example,
a user can select several parts to
make a zone. The box-shaped area
defined by the outer limits of the
parts make up the geographical
space of the zone. To work on different portions of an assembly, the
user switches zones.
Assembly auto(mated) constraints allow rapid constraining of imported assemblies for motion studies. The feature performs
in minutes what would normally
take hours to do manually.
Component grouping allows
better design control, yet does
not effect how the assembly is
physically constructed. Simplifying the pathfinder (history tree)
yields more productive modeling
because of the simpler presentation. Users can select components
to form groups and then Move,
Copy, or Rotate them while maintaining the internal mating relationships. (An option also allows
deleting relationships.) Building
digital versions of large machines
frequently requires duplicating subassemblies, so this wellthought-out capability serves to
speed modeling. Additionally, a
Group feature lets users group
parts that might not be thought of
as a subassembly, such as all similar bolts. Then the group can be
worked with commands such as
Activate, Inactivate, Hide, Show,
and Move Multiple Parts. Groups are invisible to
the Draft environment,
so BOM structures are
unaffected.
Drawing review
mode offers a complete
visualization of massive assemblies in seconds, not hours. It is
possible because Solid
Edge stores independent
drawing data. In addition,
2D drafting in V20 makes
working with massive assemblies easier. Instead
of many minutes to open
a drawing of a severalthousand-part assembly, it takes about 6 seconds to open the same
drawing in inactive mode. Users
can even view and print inactive
drawings, add dimensions and
annotations, and add and remove
BOM balloons. Having an independent copy of the 2D drawing
derived from the 3D model also
lets users open drawings when a
3D model is not found, or worse,
inadvertently deleted.
V20 also speeds performance
of fully active assemblies by inactivating (converting to a light-weight view) parts not recently
used. User interface changes include: a dynamic preview of direct
edits that shows what a change
would be before it is made and
committed, saving valuable design time, generating automatic
tabulated drawing views for families of parts, and feature library
helpers that displays explanations of how features are to be
placed.
The Group feature creates an Assembly Group of gripper components for operations such as Activate, Inactivate, Show, Hide, or Move Multiple Parts. Making Groups like this can simplify the history tree (pathfinder).
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© 2012 Penton Media Inc.
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