Bound mates in assembly?
Bound mates in assembly?
(OP)
I'm interested in making a mate as such:
I have an L Bracket which, instead of having a standard through-hole, I have a rectangler hole (ends filleted) so that the L Bracket can be bolted onto another part, then adjusted. So I'd like to make a mate so that the screw can lie anywhere within this hole. It's not as easy to do as a concentric mate (screw to hole). I suppose I could use collision detection and that would work, but I'd rather not do that. Any suggestions on how I could about this? Thanks in advance for any help!
Brent
I have an L Bracket which, instead of having a standard through-hole, I have a rectangler hole (ends filleted) so that the L Bracket can be bolted onto another part, then adjusted. So I'd like to make a mate so that the screw can lie anywhere within this hole. It's not as easy to do as a concentric mate (screw to hole). I suppose I could use collision detection and that would work, but I'd rather not do that. Any suggestions on how I could about this? Thanks in advance for any help!
Brent






RE: Bound mates in assembly?
One way is to sketch a line centered along the length of the slot and make the screw origin to the sketch line--this will allow some sliding.
Another way is similar to the first method, but using a plane centered along the length of the slot instead of a mere sketch line. More stable, a little more set-up time.
There are other ways, too, if necessary. The ones I listed are simple ones I thought of first.
Jeff Mowry
www.industrialdesignhaus.com
Reality is no respecter of good intentions.
RE: Bound mates in assembly?
Chris
Sr. Mechanical Designer, CAD
SolidWorks 05 SP3.1 / PDMWorks 05
ctopher's home site
FAQ559-1100
FAQ559-716
RE: Bound mates in assembly?
Assuming it's the "L Bracket" that's moving, the fastener should be mated to the "another part". The "L Bracket" should then have a Limit Mate set to the fastener.
Making the best use of this Forum. FAQ559-716
How to get answers to your SW questions. FAQ559-1091
Helpful SW websites every user should be aware of. FAQ559-520
RE: Bound mates in assembly?
thanks for the tip. I tried it, and it does work, however, it doesnt limit how far it can slide, and the lbracket can slide indefenitely. The coincidence mate takes the centerline as well as imaginary extensions of it into infinity.
CorBlimey, I see what you're saying as well, but I'm not sure what you mean by a limit Mate.
Sorry for the questions, I'm fairly new to SolidWorks. I've worked for a year with EDS: I-deas, and though I much prefer SW, It's still taking some time to learn how it all works.
Thanks again!
RE: Bound mates in assembly?
Making the best use of this Forum. FAQ559-716
How to get answers to your SW questions. FAQ559-1091
Helpful SW websites every user should be aware of. FAQ559-520