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Why add a material to an assembly?

Pettersson
15-Moonstone

Why add a material to an assembly?

simple question: Does anyone know why you can add materials to assemblies? You used to not be able to do this, but in Creo 5 you can. You still can't assign any material to the assembly, so what's the point of being able to add materials to it? They don't seem to be used for anything? Does anyone have a use case for this? why was this functionality added?

ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions

It's for defining flexible (variable) materials in assembled components. Thanks to that you can define various materials at assembly level and then use this materials to assign specific material to a flexible component. It allows you to insert multiple models and vary materials for every one of them depending on their occurrence (materials you can assign to a flexible component are restricted to only ones defined in the assembly) like this:

 

creo_4_flexible_materials.png

As you can see, even though the original model has been assigned a material, at the assembly level it has been changed to a different material for every occurrence of the model.

View solution in original post

9 REPLIES 9

Maybe to help in Simulate runs? You need to assign materials to the components if you're going to do an analysis, so they might be letting you pre-load what you'll eventually use?

Pettersson
15-Moonstone
(To:KenFarley)

I don't have access to Simulate, but trying to leverage the assembly level materials to add them to the individual components in normal Assembly mode doesn't really work well. I can open the Assembly materials and save them to disk, and then load them at the component level, but that doesn't seem very practical.

Hi,

I think that Creo Simulate is able to use material assigned to assembly, only. Creo Parametric ignores material assigned to assembly.


Martin Hanák
Dale_Rosema
23-Emerald III
(To:Pettersson)

That thread talks about adding material (i.e. increasing the volume of material) on the assembly level). I'm talking about adding a material (adding material properties) at the assembly level. Either you misunderstood me, or I misunderstood you.

Dale_Rosema
23-Emerald III
(To:Pettersson)

I misunderstood you.    🙂

It's for defining flexible (variable) materials in assembled components. Thanks to that you can define various materials at assembly level and then use this materials to assign specific material to a flexible component. It allows you to insert multiple models and vary materials for every one of them depending on their occurrence (materials you can assign to a flexible component are restricted to only ones defined in the assembly) like this:

 

creo_4_flexible_materials.png

As you can see, even though the original model has been assigned a material, at the assembly level it has been changed to a different material for every occurrence of the model.

Thank you! That's an interesting use, and makes sense. My curiosity is sated.

Ben8
13-Aquamarine
(To:LukaszMazur)

In addition to this, it seems that assembly materials are used (and required) by Weldments application as explained in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SJfOM8kLnEY&list=PLRhPac0z_f-EVYiBkl4i-smIbxLouBt0B&index=1

 

This Creo Parametric tutorial covers setting up configuration options and defining materials for use in creating weld features in parts and assemblies. For more information, visit https://www.creowindchill.com. If you learned something from this video, please give it a thumbs up. If you like this
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