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Managing Layers

KarenMoore
1-Newbie

Managing Layers


Someone gave a presentation at PTC/User Conference several years back on
managing layers. Does anyone have that or know how I can get that
presentation? I can't find it in the archives.
Karen Moore,
Designer Sr. CAD
National Nuclear Security Administration's
Kansas City Plant
Managed by Honeywell FM&T, LLC
kmoore@kcp.com
7 REPLIES 7

Yes! Thanks for the quick reply. Attached is the file.

I don't have the link. The presentation is from the 2007 PTCUser World Event. I have attached the file again. Thedemos are not available which it what I was looking for.

In Reply to Karen Moore:



Yes! Thanks for the quick reply. Attached is the file.


The presentation is also attached to this excellent thread on the
subject at MCADCentral:



--
Doug Schaefer | Experienced Mechanical Design Engineer
LinkedIn

Does anyone have experience with the RESTRUCTURE command?

How I understand it works, is that you can tell an assembly component that it now reports to a different assembly via dragging in the model tree.

It sounds good on paper, but I'm not exactly sure how it works. It would have to break all the relations of the ASM it reports to, and change them to the new ASM, while keeping the same physical assembly constraints.

It also sounds too good to be true. I also suspect that it might cause havoc with Team Center Enterprise, our PDM system here.

It would save me a lot of work, but...


Doug Pogatetz
Northrop Grumman Corporation



Sorry for the double post...

Does anyone have experience with the RESTRUCTURE command?

How I understand it works, is that you can tell an assembly component that it now reports to a different assembly via dragging in the model tree.

It sounds good on paper, but I'm not exactly sure how it works. It would have to break all the relations of the ASM it reports to, and change them to the new ASM, while keeping the same physical assembly constraints.

It also sounds too good to be true. I also suspect that it might cause havoc with Team Center Enterprise, our PDM system here.

It would save me a lot of work, but...

Doug Pogatetz
Northrop Grumman Corporation

In some ways it's too good to be true; in others, it's fantastic.



The important thing to mention is that when you say "would have to break all
the relations of the ASM it reports to, and change them to the new ASM,
while keeping the same physical assembly constraints." Ideally, this would
be true, but that's not what it does*. Rather, it retains a relationship to
the original assembly. So, for example, if I have

1.asm

--2.asm

----a.prt

----b.prt

--c.prt



And restructure it to

1.asm

--2.asm

----a.prt

----b.prt

----c.prt



(in other words, c.prt was not a component in 2.asm, now it is)

If I do this, and I'm using Intralink, I cannot check 2.asm back into
Commonspace without checking in 1.asm, because 2.asm needs 1.asm to know
where to put c.prt.



I cannot speak to TeamCenter, as I've never used it, but from what I've
read**, I'd hazard a guess this might indeed cause havoc with it.







* - This may have changed in more recent versions; we're on WF3.

** - we're currently researching our successor to Intralink 3.4, so I've
spend two days reading about TC & Agile & SAP with Pro/E data, and it sounds
finicky, to say the least



-



Lyle Beidler
MGS Inc
178 Muddy Creek Church Rd
Denver PA 17517
717-336-7528
Fax 717-336-0514
<">mailto:-> -
<">http://www.mgsincorporated.com>

I'd plan ahead a little. If you create a new component in assembly mode or
place a component in a different (higher or lower) assembly, it will
remember the constraints when moved. If it was constrained to features or
parts in the destination assembly, you can just move the part there and not
have to redefine the constraints.



Anytime you move a component from one assembly to another, it will retain
its constraints. If the constraints are in a different location than the
destination assembly, you will need to redefine the constraints locally if
you don't want external references outside the assembly.



Bill


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