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Hi all!
Please see attached.
Read notes in PDF.
Anyone ever deal with this?
This is not isolated to just this case. It can be duplicated from scratch.
Thanks,
Wayne
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi,
I attached video showing appropriate steps ...
Attention!!! Part mass properties are fixed for ever, any geometry modification does not cause a change in weight.
Don't add any columns to your family table that will change based on the effects of the assembly level cut (like calculated mass.)
This is in fact a solution. However, our standards call for the use of these at the moment. Thanks.
One thought I had was to somehow make the one part weight = to the others via a relation. I am not sure how to write that?
Realize that assembly cuts create "hidden" family tables out of the affected components which means for the purposes of the repeat region these are unique models with different masses.
Yeah. I was actually helping someone out with this. I have never had this situation. This is news to me. Thanks.
Overall, if you mean for that cut to exist in the actual part rather than only in the context of the assembly, then I would avoid using an assembly cut. Assembly cuts only affect the particular component placement that it directly cuts. You can use the options in the cut to have it affect that actual part and then in your example they both would have the hole but in general that's where I'd try to avoid the assembly cut to begin with.
I am helping someone out with this. For whatever reason, they have the need to machine in the finished assembly. I do agree assembly features in general come with issues. Thanks.
@wfalco wrote:
Hi all!
Please see attached.
Read notes in PDF.
Anyone ever deal with this?
This is not isolated to just this case. It can be duplicated from scratch.
Thanks,
Wayne
Hi,
in part properties you can change the method how its weight (and other properties) is obtained. By default weight is calculated by Creo (in this case your two components have different weight). You can set part mass properties to fully assigned, this means that you assign fixed value to mass parameter (in this case both components have the same weight and in repeat region they "fall" into the same row).
Sounds interesting. I am not sure how to do this. I can send you my little sample drawing if that helps?
No problem, send it.
Hi,
I attached video showing appropriate steps ...
Attention!!! Part mass properties are fixed for ever, any geometry modification does not cause a change in weight.
Hi,
I attached video showing appropriate steps ...
Attention!!! Part mass properties are fixed for ever, any geometry modification does not cause a change in weight.
Wow. Your alright man. Nice job. I need to go try this. Did you save the drawing after the changes? That may help. I actually have to pass this on to another person. Thanks so much Martin! Or did I see someone call you Hank?
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
Hi,
I do not have Creo 4.0 M020 installed. Therefore I can't send you the results of my modification. Try reproducing modification using video, it is quick and easy.
It worked! No need to send files back. Awesome. Now I need to understand what/why it works.
Thanks you again!
I have to figure out how to download your video.
I have to figure out how to download your video.
Click the little arrow after ".mp4".
Tom,
It's a good thing I have multiple browsers installed. No arrow on IE! Works in FireFox.
Thank you sir. Have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
Wayne
What version of Internet Explorer? I just tried in IE 11, Edge, Chrome, and Firefox and it shows up in all of them.
See attached pic.
Our settings are globally controlled - so...
Yeah...Idunno. Gotta be in the setting I spose.