What are folks finding to be the most direct path from Pro/E design model to a flow volume model? This is for sending to a CFD contractor who doesn't use Pro/Engineer.
Thanks in advance,
Gavin B. Rumble, PE
Solid Engineering
336-224-2312
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You can perform an assembly "cut out" on a part that encompasses the region where your fluid body needs to exist. The issue you may have here is that Pro/E may squawk at individual component tolerances not being compatible. Depending on how many parts may be mismatched, this could cause you to begin pulling your hair out! More often than not this approach works well. Check with your CFD supplier to see if they would simply like a STEP or IGES file of your assembly so they can generate the flow volume. It may be best for them to control what regions are simplified and which areas they need to preserve details for simulation accuracy.
The consensus of the responses received indicates that the "Cut-out" functionality in Assembly mode provides the best way to prepare a flow volume from a solid model.
I am a newbie to Pro/Mechanica (used to Algor/Autodesk Simulation).
When I try to run a Pro/Mechanica analysis, I get "Cannot start design study" error. I am able to add loads, constraints, material properties & constraints though. The floating module shows Struct_simulation added to my session.