Assembly Statistics- Unique Parts?
Assembly Statistics- Unique Parts?
(OP)
I have an assembly, using Assembly Statistics option (SW03sp3.1), it reveals:
696 Total number of components
638 Parts
263 Unique Parts
58 Sub-assemblies
51 Unique sub-assemblies
My question is what is the difference between "Parts" and "Unique Parts"? I cannot find reference to what "unique" implies.
I have redesigned a product, and need to compare the part count of the new product versus the old to use in quick & dirty cost reduction calcs. I only need the actualy parts we will be manufacturing in-house, and not hardware numbers. I'd hate to have to cycle through every file and create configs to supress hardware (but I think this is the answer). Still, I'd like to know what makes a file "unique".
696 Total number of components
638 Parts
263 Unique Parts
58 Sub-assemblies
51 Unique sub-assemblies
My question is what is the difference between "Parts" and "Unique Parts"? I cannot find reference to what "unique" implies.
I have redesigned a product, and need to compare the part count of the new product versus the old to use in quick & dirty cost reduction calcs. I only need the actualy parts we will be manufacturing in-house, and not hardware numbers. I'd hate to have to cycle through every file and create configs to supress hardware (but I think this is the answer). Still, I'd like to know what makes a file "unique".
Ray Reynolds
"Computers in the future may weigh no more than 1.5 tons."
Popular Mechanics, forecasting the relentless march of science, 1949
Have you read FAQ731-376 to make the best use of Eng-Tips Forums?






RE: Assembly Statistics- Unique Parts?
http://www.EsoxRepublic.com
RE: Assembly Statistics- Unique Parts?
Ray Reynolds
"Computers in the future may weigh no more than 1.5 tons."
Popular Mechanics, forecasting the relentless march of science, 1949
Have you read FAQ731-376 to make the best use of Eng-Tips Forums?
RE: Assembly Statistics- Unique Parts?
You've 696 components what is inclusief parts and (sub-)assemblies. Without assemblies (totaly 58) you've 638 parts (check: 638+58 = 696). From that 696 components are 263 parts unique what means that they are different from each other. The rest (375) are 'parts' you've used more than once in your assembly. Bolts etc. are used more often in one assembly but are once unique.
Hope it make sens.
Regards,
Bertus
Netherlands
RE: Assembly Statistics- Unique Parts?
To prove it to yourself without question, do what TheTick says in a test. Create an assembly with two plates held together with four instances of the same screw. Using Assembly Statistics option (SW03sp3.1), it should reveal you have 6 parts but 3 unique parts.
Bradley
RE: Assembly Statistics- Unique Parts?
I just wasn't able to find anything in the online help, and I never paid much attention to anything else on that pop-up window besides number of mates.
Ray Reynolds
"Computers in the future may weigh no more than 1.5 tons."
Popular Mechanics, forecasting the relentless march of science, 1949
Have you read FAQ731-376 to make the best use of Eng-Tips Forums?
RE: Assembly Statistics- Unique Parts?
RE: Assembly Statistics- Unique Parts?
•part count includes parts at all levels
•two instances of a part with different configurations counts as the same part
•envelopes count as components
RE: Assembly Statistics- Unique Parts?
hmmm... Now I gotta check... Im hoping its possible that this correlates to the "Part Number displayed when used in Bill of Masterials" selection in the Configuration properties of the Part file.... :/
RE: Assembly Statistics- Unique Parts?
I meant that in terms of the count for "unique parts".