drawoh
Mechanical
- Oct 1, 2002
- 8,947
I am reviewing several packages of casting drawings that may or may not have been done in SolidWorks. I have just got my hands on some DFMA communication, and now I know which features in my part were machined after casting. I have a new job and my understanding is that I am the in-house expert on mechanical[ ]DFMA.
If I were designing a casting in Solidworks, I would model and document the casting. I would then attach the casting model to an assembly, and I would model and document the machining, at the assembly level. I can now see what features are cast, and what features are machined in. I have the option of copying the machining drawing and created a new part based on the unmodified original casting.
What do people think of this? How do you manage castings? Can you make a good argument for doing this some other way?
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JHG
If I were designing a casting in Solidworks, I would model and document the casting. I would then attach the casting model to an assembly, and I would model and document the machining, at the assembly level. I can now see what features are cast, and what features are machined in. I have the option of copying the machining drawing and created a new part based on the unmodified original casting.
What do people think of this? How do you manage castings? Can you make a good argument for doing this some other way?
--
JHG