Component part structure displayed in assembly Navigator...setting?
Component part structure displayed in assembly Navigator...setting?
(OP)
New to NX10...last used NX8 a few years ago.
Seems like I remember that when you have components in an assembly file, that when you look at the structure in
Assembly Navigator window, you could click on the plus symbol next to the component name and the component structure would
be there to access geometry or whatever, when you made the component the work part, of course.
Am I mis-remembering this functionality? Is this a setting somewhere that I need to turn on to see the part structure in the
Assembly Navigator window?
Steve
Seems like I remember that when you have components in an assembly file, that when you look at the structure in
Assembly Navigator window, you could click on the plus symbol next to the component name and the component structure would
be there to access geometry or whatever, when you made the component the work part, of course.
Am I mis-remembering this functionality? Is this a setting somewhere that I need to turn on to see the part structure in the
Assembly Navigator window?
Steve





RE: Component part structure displayed in assembly Navigator...setting?
www.nxjournaling.com
RE: Component part structure displayed in assembly Navigator...setting?
However, if you have your part navigator NOT showing timestamp order you also get the "packed" view of your features...
Ronald van den Broek
Senior Application Engineer
Winterthur Gas & Diesel Ltd
NX8.5.3 / TC9.1.2
HPZ420 Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-1620 0 @ 3.60GHz, 32 Gb Win7 64B
Nvidea Quadro4000 2048MB DDR5
HP Zbook15
Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-4800MQ
CPU @ 2.70 GHz Win7 64b
Nvidia K1100M 2048 MB DDR5
RE: Component part structure displayed in assembly Navigator...setting?
be there to access geometry or whatever, "
-This is not NX, it's a CAD system named ........
You can have both the Assembly navigator and the Part Navigator open at the same time, ( if you un-dock one of them )
It will provide an equivalent functionality.
Regards,
Tomas