The difference between STEP 203 and 214 is broadly 203=Aerospace, 214=Automotive. The geometry is written the same for both, so you don't generally see any conflicts even if you use the wrong translator. The differences (if I remember correctly) are about header information and some other...
Something that I've done to make this event a little less common is to add a button for "Save Work Part Only" to the toolbar/ribbon/quick-access toolbar and remove the default "Save" button from the default role. It's not completely fool-proof, but it definitely has an impact and is dead easy to...
You're right. It's not a persistent top-down design. It's a way of getting from 2D to 3D, at which point you work solely in the 3D.
Chris Abbott
TEAM Engineering
www.team-eng.com
Assuming pre-NX9:
- Change selection filter to "Point" (this is important. Point feature =/= point geometry)
- Select one of the points, right-click > Properties
- General tab > Change name to POINT1
- Click OK
- Tools > Spreadsheet
- Select cells A1 to C1
- Type =POINT("POINT1")
- Press...
You can create an NX spreadsheet that has associative cell values listing the XYZ coordinates of any number of points. Equally you could do the same for the "point" at the origin of a datum CSYS that you could then move around as if it were a WCS of sorts. A bit of subtraction on the spreadsheet...
Just a bit of clarification on the previous post, obviously "Instance Attributes" are separate to "Component Attributes". But the same issue applies to both - they are applied and stored at a specific assembly level, and appear not to be retrievable at the drawing level above.
Chris Abbott
TEAM...
Hi John,
I think the confusion here is that I'm referring to "Component Attributes" rather than "Part Attributes". My understanding is that Component Attributes are instance-specific, and not tied to the actual parts themselves. Very useful for things such as the connector IDs in routing where...
Does anyone know if this is possible?
The specific scenario is having Electrical Routing connector IDs displayed in the parts list in Drafting. They are stored as the "UNIQUE_ID" component attribute that is only visible at the routing assembly level. As soon as you use the master model method...
If the geometry in the parts is facet, you will see this problem. If they are solids/surfaces, try loading them exact and seeing if you have the same issue.
Chris Abbott
TEAM Engineering
www.team-eng.com
Is it possible you are picking key points (end points, mid points) of the lines, rather than the lines themselves? That tends to show an angular dimension that doesn't correspond with the lines.
Chris Abbott
TEAM Engineering
www.team-eng.com
I'm not sure there's an easy way to do this with Motion Sim in NX, using traditional gears and joints.
The only two possibilities I can think of are to skip this portion of the mechanism, and use a Recurdyn formula function to drive a revolute joint that goes clockwise/anticlockwise at the...
In answer to your question, Kinematics is a very quick-to-solve mechanism type. It also allows an element of flexibility in what you want to drive and when, even after the solve. It is good for fully-defined mechanisms with no response to the weight of the bodies involved.
Dynamics is much more...
Dynamics uses additional inputs to the motion beyond motor drivers, and driven joints. Primarily, that's gravity and momentum, which acts on any links that have degrees of freedom. That's why all links must have a mass, centre of mass, and moments of inertia.
Kinematics does not use gravity or...
There's no quick, one-hit button for this, as it depends on the geometry and circumstances. In general, you need to use Analysis > Examine Geometry to determine any openings in the body, fill those surfaces manually, then sew it all together.
Chris Abbott
TEAM Engineering
www.team-eng.com
Ok, I see. So if you do not have write-access to the sub-assemblies, you will have to use Position Override on the components you want to move in those sub-assemblies (you do not need to do this for parts at the top-level).
Once you have done that, create your arrangement and make it active...
What parts are you trying to move in the arrangement?
Assembly
- Subassembly <---this?
- Part
- Part <---or these?
- Part
- Subassembly
- Part
- Part
- Part
Chris Abbott
TEAM Engineering
www.team-eng.com
Apply to Used and Position Override are two completely different things.
Apply to Used turned ON saves the new part position into the current active arrangement only. Turned OFF it will apply the part position to all arrangements in the assembly.
Position Override may or may not be something...
If the part is in the main assembly (not in a sub-assembly) you do not need to do position override - it should just work.
Chris Abbott
TEAM Engineering
www.team-eng.com
Any components you want to move in the arrangement you should apply position override to once. You do not (and can't) do this for every arrangement.
Chris Abbott
TEAM Engineering
www.team-eng.com