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"Kevin Demarco" wrote:
The biggest thing I've noticed is that we get assembly cut features as a pattern at the assembly level but are individual features if shown at the part level. Not sure if that might be causing the problem since I don't use it frequently.
"Aris Troulis" wrote:
Make sure the assembly cuts are set to part level and the appropriate assembly from the family table is on memory.
"Aris Troulis" wrote:
Make sure the assembly cuts are set to part level and the appropriate assembly from the family table is on memory.
"Aris Troulis" wrote:
Make sure the assembly cuts are set to part level and the appropriate assembly from the family table is on memory.
"Kevin Demarco" wrote:
I saw a few strange things but was able to correct them. I ended up with fastener head with no bodies in one. Turned out that assembly hole was adding the fastener to the intersected parts list. When I tried to remove it and turned off automatic update the patterns failed. I had to delete the patterns and recreate them. I found I could create a patterned pattern of holes in one part, create an assembly hole and reference pattern it, and I could use insert to place fasteners. If I just created an assembly hole and made a patterned pattern, only the first group of patterned holes would regenerate with fasteners the others would fail. To get fasteners to regenerate with the other hole groups I had to use align for the axes of the leader hole and fastener. I didn't have any problems with the axes showing up on a drawing.
"Kevin Demarco" wrote:
A reference pattern for a patterned pattern is a little different. When you initially create the reference pattern it uses the feature reference (the first group of 4). There are two parts to the pattern, feature and group. If you edit the definition of the reference pattern it should show feature in a drop down box. If you select group what you should end up with is the first instance in each of the groups (in your case you should see three holes, one from each group and should be a instance of the pattern leader). If you select both you should see three groups of four holes. I have not tried to mirror them.
"Cary Brown" wrote:
The trick in using this ability is to ensure that EVERYTHING in your pattern is "referenced" to what you're patterning. That means that you need to create datums "on the fly" to reference your "inner pattern" off of, group those with the features, and then do the higher-level pattern using that group, not just the lower-level feature pattern. Think of it as a tree structure. Remember, every feature you're working with is a pattern of SOMETHING... the problems you're seeing come up when you end up with references (dimensional, alignment, etc) which are looking at multiple "levels." If you ensure that everything is only looking at the appropriate level for all it's definition, you won't get the "weirdness" you're experiencing. I, personally, prefer to use "classic sketcher" because it does not create "autodimensiong" or "auto-constraining." I prefer to work through the entire dimensioning and constraining process manually, every single time. I suspect that... "auto-dim" and "auto-constrain" are what are causing your issues.