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MBD: Standalone Annotations vs. Annotation Features

RaphaelCNascime
12-Amethyst

In Creo 4.0 one of the significant enhancements was to provide advanced capabilities for standalone annotations of the following types: Geometric Tolerance (GTOL), Datum Feature Symbol, Datum Target and Dimension. In this blog post, I'll provide a little bit of background to explain the differences (up through Creo 3.0) between standalone annotations and annotation elements owned by an annotation feature. Then I'll explain in more detail the enhancements in Creo 4.0 and I'll finish up with some advice on when you might want to consider using either standalone annotations or annotation elements owned by annotation features.

What is a standalone annotation and how is it different from an annotation element inside an annotation feature?

A standalone annotation is an annotation that is not "owned" by some other feature in the model. These annotations are listed in the model tree under the Annotations node.

Annotation elements, by contrast, are owned by another feature in the model. Typically this feature is an annotation feature, but it can also be general modeling feature (such as Extrude or Hole).

Generally speaking, standalone annotations have the same graphical appearance and the same basic properties as annotation elements. For example, the dialog box for configuring a GTOL is identical whether that GTOL is a standalone annotation or an annotation element.

What sets standalone annotations apart from annotation elements are a number of advanced capabilities that annotation elements have as a result of being part of an explicit feature in the model. Those advanced capabilities are:

  • Reference handling and regeneration
    • Annotation elements can support multiple references of various types (to support the semantic definition of the annotation) and they regenerate at a specific point in the regeneration sequence determined by their owning feature. If something goes wrong during regeneration, annotation elements will provide either a failure or a warning in the Notification Center and the model tree.
  • Support for parameters
    • Annotation elements can have parameters and some types have a number of system parameters that get automatically created for the various properties of the annotation element.
  • Ability to Designate and mark as Control Characteristic
    • Annotation elements may be designated and made visible to Windchill and also identified as a control characteristic and have a Windchill model item that gets passed to MPMLink.
  • Support for feature operations
    • The annotation feature, which owns the annotation elements, may participate in feature operations, such as pattern, suppress, copy, etc...

For companies moving to Model-Based Definition, these advanced capabilities make annotation elements within annotation features the preferred choice in Creo 3.0 and earlier.

Enhancements to standalone annotations in Creo 4.0

In Creo 4.0 we have enhanced the standalone annotations for GTOL, Datum Feature Symbol, Datum Target and Dimension to include most of the same advanced capabilities that were previously only available for annotation elements inside annotation features. So, these types of annotations will now support:

  • Reference handling and regeneration
    • The contextual ribbon tab for the enhanced standalone annotations will have a References button available at the far left side of the ribbon where you can select the references that you would like to have as the semantic definition of that annotation
  • Parameters
    • You can access the parameters of the enhanced standalone annotations from the right mouse button menu
  • Designation as Control Characteristic
    • You can access the options to designate and set control characteristic from the Options button in the contextual ribbon tab for the enhanced standalone annotations

The only capability not available to standalone annotations is the ability to support feature operations, which will still only be possible when annotation feature is used.

It is important to note that these advanced capabilities are only available in Creo 4.0 for the standalone annotations of the four types noted above. Other types of standalone annotations (such as Notes, Symbols, Surface Finish Symbols) do NOT have these advanced capabilities and the standalone annotations of these types will behave as they currently do in Creo 3.0. We plan to provide the advanced capabilities for these remaining annotation types in Creo 5.0.

When to use standalone annotations or annotation features in Creo 4.0

Given that most of the advanced capabilities of annotation elements will be available with standalone annotations (for GTOL, Datum Feature Symbol, Datum Target and Dimension), there is less of a need to use annotation features in Creo 4.0. Here are some criteria that can help you decide which method to use.

Reasons to use annotation elements and annotation features:

  1. If you are using an annotation type that has not been enhanced in Creo 4.0
    • Remember, the only annotation types that were enhanced are GTOL, Datum Feature Symbol, Datum Target and Dimension, so if you're using symbols, notes, surface finish, etc... you'll still likely want to use annotation features for these
  2. If you want to perform some kind of feature operation on the annotations
    • Standalone annotations are not contained inside an explicit feature in the model tree, so you cannot include them in feature operations, such as pattern, copy, suppress, UDF, etc... If you intend to do some kind of feature operation, then you'll still want to use annotation features
  3. If you want to organize your model tree using annotation features
    • Standalone annotations appear in the model tree under the Annotations node at the top. They are presented in a flat list grouped by type. If the model contains a large number of annotations, it might become a little hard to manage such a long list of annotations in Creo 4.0. Using annotation features would allow you to group and structure the annotations in the tree.

Besides the three reasons above there generally aren't any other advantages to using annotation elements over the enhanced standalone annotations. Most importantly, you can capture the full semantic definition while using the enhanced standalone annotations and it is this ability to define fully semantic GD&T that many companies are considering the major benefit to a Model-Based Definition.

If you have any questions, please let me know in the comments below.

-Raphael

UPDATE: 2017-03-06

Moved this blog from Creo Sneak Peek group to the Model Based Enterprise group.

Also edited slightly to reflect the fact that Creo 4.0 is now shipping

34 Comments
RaphaelCNascime
12-Amethyst

Hi John Bijnens‌,

As far as I know, the tools for generating NC toolpaths are based on the geometry of the model and they don't directly reference the dimensions in the model - whether created dimensions displayed as annotations in a combination state or the embedded feature dimensions that are visible while editing the parametric features. Said another way, the toolpath follows the contours of the geometry itself and doesn't rely on the dimension values to know where a surface is located relative to the origin. So, I think the short answer is that generation of NC toolpaths by the software should not be affected by the type of dimension used.

However, the chosen dimension scheme and the tolerances would, of course, influence how the manufacturer chooses to manufacture the part and also how the inspector would choose to inspect the part. What I'm referring to here is the choice of how to fixture the part, what tool to use, what type of toolpath to use, and other aspects of the process such as feeds, speeds, etc... All of this would be determined based on the requirements specified by the dimension scheme and tolerance values.

As to whether there could be a discrepancy (in terms of dimension scheme and tolerance values) between the underlying feature dimensions used to construct the part model and the created dimensions that are displayed as annotations in a combination state, the short answer is yes, there could be a discrepancy there. But, it is important to note that the only dimensions that matter in terms of communicating manufacturing and inspection requirements are the dimensions that are displayed as annotations in the combination state. This topic merits its own separate discussion to get more into the details, but what I've said here is the basic jist of it.

jarcher-3
1-Visitor

John,

As for driving vs. driven: Yes the fact that you can, in Creo 3.0, add a semantic reference only within a Annotation Feature is limiting and thus the need for using a driven annotation. Your observation is spot on. Note that in Creo 4.0, users will be able add additional semantic references to driving dimensions. This should open up the use of driving dimensions more than driven by the end users developing the MBD, which is what was taught years ago in old drawing courses (use driving, don't create new). Most users want to just use an Standard Annotation and not go the extra step to add to an Annotation Feature to generate an Annotation Element.

A semi-MBD side topic is to consider manufacturing UDFs. These would allow the placement of common features with all of the manufacturing information needed for Creo NC. Depending on what type of models you manufacture, this may help minimize issues you see with deltas in dimensioning. There would be a need for someone to build Mfg UDF's, but if you keep having to build the same NC tool paths over and over, they may be beneficial.

Regards,

Jon Archer

jarcher-3
1-Visitor

Raphael,

One additional comment on Annotation Elements within Annotation Features as per your comment:

Support for feature operations

  • The annotation feature, which owns the annotation elements, may participate in feature operations, such as pattern, suppress, copy, etc...

One feature "operation" that I have found very powerful is the utilization UDF's that include Annotation Features. Standalone Annotations cannot be collected in a UDF, but Annotation Features and their included Elements can. This can include any parameterization that is included within the Annotation Elements.

Regards,

Jon Archer

RaphaelCNascime
12-Amethyst

Totally agree.

If you have certain types of features that are used often it can be a big time-saver to build a UDF that includes the annotations to document that feature.

JB_87049
15-Moonstone

Raphael, thank you very much for your explanation. By the way I really love the improvements in Creo 4.


Creo Manufacturing is capable of generating tool paths thereby taking assigned dimensional tolerances into consideration (e.g. through the option dimension boundaries)

2017-04-15_19-55-31.png

The dimensions that are taken into account (with assigned tolerances and fittings) are sketcher dimensions and other driving dimensions, not dimensioning done by 3D annotating. Thus if the 3D annotating dimension is a driven dimension that will cause a lot of work for the manufacturing people. So my question is how is this managed by PTC Creo in a MBE environment ?

RaphaelCNascime
12-Amethyst

Hi John,

OK, I understand now what you are referring to. The Dimension Boundaries command basically regenerates the model taking into account the plus-minus tolerances for the various driving parametric feature dimensions. So, if you create an extrude that is 10.5mm +/- 0.2mm and you measure the geometry in the model you would get exactly 10.5mm. If you then set the dimension bound for that dimension to "Upper" and regenerated the model and then measure the geometry you would get exactly 10.7mm. In this case, even the NC toolpath still follows the geometry of the model, you just have the ability to regenerate that geometry to something other than the nominal condition in which it was modeled.

As you noted, of course this can only work for the driving feature dimensions and will not take into account any created (driven) dimensions. So, if your models are built so that the manufacturer needs to apply the dimension boundary (upper, middle, lower) to some other condition for toolpath generation, then I guess there is no other choice but to use the driving dimensions and to avoid using driven dimensions. Unfortunately...

hostroske
13-Aquamarine

The disadvantage on driving dimension is, that they do not collect their references automatically. In case I create a sketch, and a feature out of it, it should be easy for PTC to identify the reference surfaces which are connected to the sketch. OK in CREO4 we can add those references, but this is manual work, and is slowing down the process of a design. In case we use Annotation features, we can add annotation elements into an annotation feature, but once they are inside a feature, it's not possible to get them out again. This is a big issue on Family Table Instances. An Annotation Feature should be as flexible as a group inside Creo. From my point of view another big disadvantage of MBD in CREO is, that we are not able to group a symbol to an annotation element or feature or driving dimension, like it is in 2D drawing mode. Downstream, we cannot analyze a driven dimension together with a symbol, which is mandatory for downstream machine readable interfaces.

davehaigh
12-Amethyst

Does anyone know if as Standalone annotations were enhanced for Notes, Symbols, & Surface Finish as Raphael predicted for Creo 5 or 6?  We are in the final stages of transferring to Creo 4 right now and am wondering what the future holds in respect to standalone annotations. 

 

We've discovered that we need to develop some training around conversion of old style datums & the associated GTOL's for legacy drawings when they are revised. I'm leaning toward standalone annotations as the easier path to the new datums.

barryschaeffer1
13-Aquamarine

Anyone...

 

Can someone explain what a Driving Dimension Annotation Element is?  Can I create one in Creo 4?  Is it part of an annotation feature?

 

Barry