can you seasoned Inventor users walk me through a little discourse on the Inventor assembly heirarchy? it behaves in the same way that Solid Edge does, which i have seen firsthand create a lot of problems: you can drag items in the assembly tree anywhere you want, even above items that they are constrained to. also, you can suppress items, but their dependant items do not suppress, as well.
try this mental gymnastic exercise:
let's build a tower, made out of three blocks. drop the first block into the assembly at the origin. then stack block 2 onto it, and constrain it to block 1. then drop block 3 onto block 2, and constrain it to block 2. now, in the assembly model tree, you can drag block 3 up above block 2 and block 1 if you wish. it completely disregards the sequential order? plus, if you suppress block 2, then block 3 should be suppressed as well, since it is constrained to block 2 - but it doesn't get suppressed. so, assembly constraint heirarchies are ignored?
this is just like SE, but actually you don't have the ability to suppress objects in an assembly in SE. In Pro/E (Creo), these releationships are enforced and thus you cannot get your assembly constraints all tied up in knots like you can in SE (and apparently Inventor). having worked with SE for two years, i can tell you i came across a lot of assemblies with constraints so out of whack the only way to fix them was to delete all the constraints and start over; the problem was that SE let the user do this behavior. it appears as though Inventor does, as well...
am i missing something really important here? am i correctly describing the behavior of Inventor?
try this mental gymnastic exercise:
let's build a tower, made out of three blocks. drop the first block into the assembly at the origin. then stack block 2 onto it, and constrain it to block 1. then drop block 3 onto block 2, and constrain it to block 2. now, in the assembly model tree, you can drag block 3 up above block 2 and block 1 if you wish. it completely disregards the sequential order? plus, if you suppress block 2, then block 3 should be suppressed as well, since it is constrained to block 2 - but it doesn't get suppressed. so, assembly constraint heirarchies are ignored?
this is just like SE, but actually you don't have the ability to suppress objects in an assembly in SE. In Pro/E (Creo), these releationships are enforced and thus you cannot get your assembly constraints all tied up in knots like you can in SE (and apparently Inventor). having worked with SE for two years, i can tell you i came across a lot of assemblies with constraints so out of whack the only way to fix them was to delete all the constraints and start over; the problem was that SE let the user do this behavior. it appears as though Inventor does, as well...
am i missing something really important here? am i correctly describing the behavior of Inventor?