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Hi.
I am wondering what the best policy is when it comes to name, file name and number?
For reference we use a separate Bill of Material application nor do we put BOMs on drawings.
As of late I have begun putting a "-" on name simply to make copy/pasting parts and assembles a tiny bit quicker. But I am wondering if it is necessary to add the file extension part to file name/new number? See attachment.
Does it make any difference? What are your policies and guidelines at your workplace? All feedback welcome.
We are using Creo 7.0 and Windchill 11.1
Thanks!
These are part of what I send to new users.
Thank you for your reply.
For 1, is common name strictly required in our case? It's not something I or my colleagues has been filling out... Could be some kind of setting that automatically mirrors the file name?
For 7, why not let part and assembly have the same file name? We make quite a few welded parts and are only interested in the top number because the assembly will be done out of the house.
When using Windchill, you need unique numbers and we strip the extension from the number when it is checked-in. That would give the part and the assembly the same number and Windchill will fail to allow the check-in due to the conflict. We handle weldments with the #8 item. The assembly has the number (which will match the drawing) and the details of the assembly use the base assembly number with a dash suffix.
12345678.drw
12345678.asm
12345678-01.prt
12345678-02.prt
Hi,
Just adding my experience here in brief. Most of the things explained by Ben.
File name extension addition to the "File name" is the best practice. otherwise you will be trapped with 12345.prt and 12345.drw conflicting each other and you will be forced to depart from traceability!
Coming to Number, if you have the above setup, then the "CAD document Number" is generally mapped to the CAD File name to carryover the uniqueness and traceability.
The above 2 can be easily set up in preferences.
Usually, the Related WT Part gets the file name without the extension. This can be easily achieved by preferences.
Sometimes, a CAD document should not build a WTPart , example a place holder assembly. Or its child should not build parts, for eg., a bought out item that has been modelled as ASM (Eg., Motor, shaft set).
In the above cases, we can use the preference "Part Structure Override Attribute Name".
Does your company use significant Numbering system or Auto Numbering? This is another adjacent topic.
Cheers
Hari
Thanks for your reply.
I will contiune the use of adding file extensions, I'm not sure I understand what you mean by the CAD document number though? Do you mean that it simply should be the same as the file name?
We do not use auto numbering. We create BOMs in our external program, where each part has its own number unless we are talking welded parts. We then manually match Creo to this program.
Hi,
CAD Document number is the "Number" of the CAD document.
As you mentioned about your BOM creation process, Iam wondering on if you can create the BOM first in Windchill and use "Create CAD Document" for each WTPart. You can control the CAD Document "Number" to be same as your WTPart if you want(for traceability).
Try that. It will avoid your manual "matching".
Cheers
Hari