Hi goodlook,
In reply to the above questions and yours,
If you isolate a view it will no longer be linked to the 3D model and therefore if the model changes then the view will not be able to be updated to reflect those changes.
You CANNOT re-link the view to the model therefore the view is useless to you.
You use overload properties to hide/no-show individual parts of an assembly or change the linetype of parts in the view (ie dashed, phantom etc).
If you want to detail an assembly and its individual parts on the one sheet, you can use the overload properties in each view to no-show the parts you don't want to see.
Unfortunately when you use the overload properties on a view you can only pick individual parts not products, so if you have a hundred parts to your asembly you have a lot of work selecting 99 parts in each view to no-show.
The best way is to pick the indvidual part you would like to detail from the assembly tree.
This will only create a view showing the part you pick from the tree.
If you hold the CTRL button down on your keyboard and multi-select more than one part in the assembly tree then the view you create will only show the parts you picked not the whole assembly.
So, with the assembly open and your drawing on the screen, tile the window horizontally, Select the create FRONT VIEW icon, in the assembly tree pick the part (or CTRL and multi-select a number of parts) you would like to detail, next select a face to orientate the view, the view appears on your drawing, use the orientation button to position the view to your satisfaction, HEY PRESTO!!!! done.
In addition and in reply to the above messages,
in the overload properties dialogue box, if you uncheck the SHOWN box, the part you selected will not be shown in the view but the view still thinks you want it projected in that view just not shown, so that is why anything behind it will still be hidden by the now NOT SHOwn part.
You should uncheck the USE WHEN PROJECTING icon aswell as the SHOWN icon, then anything behind the part will be regenerated and dispayed properly.
Hope this helps,
Jakey