krywarick6
Automotive
- Jun 9, 2003
- 138
Well, actually opening a can of worms.
I'm working on a fact finding mission. We are struggling with a best practice in our company as it relates to mirroring parts.
Some will mirror a body in a part and some will mirror the part in an assembly. Some say, "What does it matter?" That's well and good until it has to be made. To me, there's a whole realm of control issues that occur here.
Let's consider a sheet metal part.
1. In a part, some may mirror the body for rh/lh parts. All well and good until one part has round holes and another has square holes. I know, same but different. To me that is a totally different part. Also, now you have to wrestle with configurations and flat patterns, blah, blah....
2. Some will mirror the part in assembly. "It's too many files to keep track of..." others argue. Is it? Compared to wrestling with configurations? What about when it's the round hole, square hole argument? Then what?
How about rebuild time, references, mates, configuration calling and any other thing that can be quirky in SolidWorks?
Everyone uses SolidWorks differently. How does your company approach things? Do you have general rules? Is it case by case? Or do things just run amuck?
Christopher Zona - Product Designer
Loretto, Ontario
I'm working on a fact finding mission. We are struggling with a best practice in our company as it relates to mirroring parts.
Some will mirror a body in a part and some will mirror the part in an assembly. Some say, "What does it matter?" That's well and good until it has to be made. To me, there's a whole realm of control issues that occur here.
Let's consider a sheet metal part.
1. In a part, some may mirror the body for rh/lh parts. All well and good until one part has round holes and another has square holes. I know, same but different. To me that is a totally different part. Also, now you have to wrestle with configurations and flat patterns, blah, blah....
2. Some will mirror the part in assembly. "It's too many files to keep track of..." others argue. Is it? Compared to wrestling with configurations? What about when it's the round hole, square hole argument? Then what?
How about rebuild time, references, mates, configuration calling and any other thing that can be quirky in SolidWorks?
Everyone uses SolidWorks differently. How does your company approach things? Do you have general rules? Is it case by case? Or do things just run amuck?
Christopher Zona - Product Designer
Loretto, Ontario