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Purple Lines in Drawings - was it ever fixed in newer versions of Creo?

RP_9430896
4-Participant

Purple Lines in Drawings - was it ever fixed in newer versions of Creo?

Hi all,

 

My company is still stuck on Creo 3 (yes, I know that's ancient - supposedly our IT department is working on upgrading us to 8 - not sure what's taking so long). Anyway, a common problem we have to deal with is the dreaded purple lines that pop up in drawing files whenever an assembly has a part derived from a STEP file that isn't perfect. 

 

My question is: has PTC ever fixed this issue in newer releases of Creo? 

 

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
StephenW
23-Emerald II
(To:RP_9430896)

I am not an export on fixing imports. The users I know who fix a lot of them are usually those who have surface modeling skills. I do not. I have occasionally been able to fix some simple stuff. I always try. Sometimes the export is intentionally made to be surface models only.

 

For the drawing, there are settings. I have lots of surface models.. 

config.pro options

HLR_for_quilts YES

In the view settings, make sure you have "hidden line removal for quilts" set to yes. 

 

If you have cross sections on your drawing, you'll need to edit the section in the model and under the models tab and check the "include quilts" option.

Seems like I'm missing something but its been a while since I had any problems

StephenW_0-1680113403621.png

 

StephenW_1-1680113632436.png

 

 

View solution in original post

6 REPLIES 6
StephenW
23-Emerald II
(To:RP_9430896)

The "purple" lines would mean that the import is a surface model and not a solid model. Nothing has changed with respect to that.

Other than being a different color in the drawing, what issues are you having with them. There are several settings that make surface model less problematic on drawings.

The best solution is to try to get your step files to solidify during import, not always possible but sometimes it pretty easy, just depends on the model.

RP_9430896
4-Participant
(To:StephenW)

Hi Stephen,

The other issue besides the color is that any part with these purple lines shows up as a wireframe in any assembly drawing that it's used in, even if "No Hidden" is selected for the display. This is a massive problem, as that means the affected part shows up through the rest of the assembly even if it's buried under a frame, panels, etc.

I'm not sure how to get the STEP file models to solidify during import. Multiple engineers here including myself have tried everything we can think of including using the meager repair tools (medical "+" symbol), saving it as shrink-wrap, trying to fix it in Solidworks first, etc. Unfortunately the STEP files we receive from many of our vendors are very complex and it isn't feasible to "fix" them in Creo. It's very frustrating, because obviously this isn't an issue in other modern CAD systems like Solidworks. I am shocked if this issue persists in newer releases of Creo.

StephenW
23-Emerald II
(To:RP_9430896)

I am not an export on fixing imports. The users I know who fix a lot of them are usually those who have surface modeling skills. I do not. I have occasionally been able to fix some simple stuff. I always try. Sometimes the export is intentionally made to be surface models only.

 

For the drawing, there are settings. I have lots of surface models.. 

config.pro options

HLR_for_quilts YES

In the view settings, make sure you have "hidden line removal for quilts" set to yes. 

 

If you have cross sections on your drawing, you'll need to edit the section in the model and under the models tab and check the "include quilts" option.

Seems like I'm missing something but its been a while since I had any problems

StephenW_0-1680113403621.png

 

StephenW_1-1680113632436.png

 

 

RP_9430896
4-Participant
(To:StephenW)

Awesome. Thank you, Stephen! 

kdirth
20-Turquoise
(To:RP_9430896)

I have had some success with "fixing" imported files and have received some information from a customer on best practices for importing.  Fixing imported models is tedious and time consuming.  The most important thing to remember when importing a model is that the accuracy of the neutral file is what it is, always use the source files accuracy.  He even said to change your models accuracy to the source file accuracy if known before importing.  The math will not work very well if the accuracies are conflicting.

kdirth_0-1680116357873.png

 


There is always more to learn in Creo.
Patriot_1776
22-Sapphire II
(To:RP_9430896)

Actually, count yourself LUCKY, I liked 3 better than 4, and a LOT better than 8.  The few actual REAL enhancements (instead of just "Bold New Graphics!") in 4 or 8 are way more than offset by all the stupid and useless graphics changes and the insistence of making everything a tiny new indecipherable icon now, which I find almost impossible to read now that my vision is going South.  Huh-LO, Egyptian hieroglyphics were obsoleted millennia ago for a reason....but I digress...

 

Best of luck!

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