coolcad
Mechanical
- Feb 27, 2004
- 32
All,
My company makes ballistic protective eyewear for the military. We are expanding our product line to head, face and neck protection. This creates some new challenges when it comes to SolidWorks and documenting our designs. I'm hoping some of you can offer suggestions to help us with a few things.
We are good with creating models and drawings for plastic injection molded parts, machined parts and sheet metal. But we are could use some advice on textiles and pattern making as well as composites and metal castings.
For metal castings (alum and zinc) (small sized parts) is there any industry standard tolerance block and notes we should put on our formats?
For textiles, we can somewhat model these items but expecting SolidWorks to generate pattern drawings in most cases is unlikely. I imagine we will have to draw the patterns by hand. But same question as the castings, is there any industry standard tolerance block and notes we should put on our formats for textiles?
Composites are much more complicated. I imagine layups would be handle like a textile pattern.
My first concern is to set up some standard formats for the various types of parts. Would anyone be willing to send me sample formats or drawings that they have seen or used for textiles, castings, and composites?
Thanks,
Glenn Wilkins, CSWP,CSWP-SMTL
Colchester, VT
My company makes ballistic protective eyewear for the military. We are expanding our product line to head, face and neck protection. This creates some new challenges when it comes to SolidWorks and documenting our designs. I'm hoping some of you can offer suggestions to help us with a few things.
We are good with creating models and drawings for plastic injection molded parts, machined parts and sheet metal. But we are could use some advice on textiles and pattern making as well as composites and metal castings.
For metal castings (alum and zinc) (small sized parts) is there any industry standard tolerance block and notes we should put on our formats?
For textiles, we can somewhat model these items but expecting SolidWorks to generate pattern drawings in most cases is unlikely. I imagine we will have to draw the patterns by hand. But same question as the castings, is there any industry standard tolerance block and notes we should put on our formats for textiles?
Composites are much more complicated. I imagine layups would be handle like a textile pattern.
My first concern is to set up some standard formats for the various types of parts. Would anyone be willing to send me sample formats or drawings that they have seen or used for textiles, castings, and composites?
Thanks,
Glenn Wilkins, CSWP,CSWP-SMTL
Colchester, VT