VinceCiotti
Mechanical
- Mar 7, 2015
- 4
My question is about documenting things like weldments, castings and forgings. Items that start with an initial "rough" or "as produced" size/shape but require machining to reach their finished state. For simplicity I'll focus my question on weldments. In addition, I will be using PMI to document the product and Teamcenter to manage the bill of materials. Lifecycle Visualization (Vismock) will be used by downstream customers to view the product.
What I begin with is an assembly which is made up of a number of individual components. Each of these components are modeled in their "stock" sizes with no machined features (holes, tapped holes, chamfers, etc). This is the point I wish to document the weldment (weld symbols, welding notes, etc). Unless I'm missing something, the process up to this point is pretty straight forward.
Here is where it gets fuzzy for me. Now I want to "machine" the weldment. Before I go any further I do know about the Assembly Cut command. This command is not a good solution to this problem. Not being able to use the hole command is a deal-breaker. Whatever the solution is I need to have the following five items:
1) For ordering purposes the bill of materials should reflect the "stock" sizes of the individual components.
2) Access to the full suite of modeling commands as many of my weldments are very large and complex and can have 30+ machined features.
3) I must be able to document, using PMI, the final "machined" part.
4) Only the weight of the "machined" part should considered during weight analysis.
5) Each document (weldment, final machined) should be viewable by downstream customers in Vismock.
I have some ideas that involve layers, model views, body promotion and/or Wave linking and Reference Sets but I wanted to see if anyone else has come up with a good solution before I go and trial-and-error something. Thanks in advance as I realize this probably isn't a 30 second response. I look forward to hearing from the community.
Vince Ciotti
Mechanical Designer
NX9, Teamcenter 10
Windows 7 Enterprise
Newport News, VA
What I begin with is an assembly which is made up of a number of individual components. Each of these components are modeled in their "stock" sizes with no machined features (holes, tapped holes, chamfers, etc). This is the point I wish to document the weldment (weld symbols, welding notes, etc). Unless I'm missing something, the process up to this point is pretty straight forward.
Here is where it gets fuzzy for me. Now I want to "machine" the weldment. Before I go any further I do know about the Assembly Cut command. This command is not a good solution to this problem. Not being able to use the hole command is a deal-breaker. Whatever the solution is I need to have the following five items:
1) For ordering purposes the bill of materials should reflect the "stock" sizes of the individual components.
2) Access to the full suite of modeling commands as many of my weldments are very large and complex and can have 30+ machined features.
3) I must be able to document, using PMI, the final "machined" part.
4) Only the weight of the "machined" part should considered during weight analysis.
5) Each document (weldment, final machined) should be viewable by downstream customers in Vismock.
I have some ideas that involve layers, model views, body promotion and/or Wave linking and Reference Sets but I wanted to see if anyone else has come up with a good solution before I go and trial-and-error something. Thanks in advance as I realize this probably isn't a 30 second response. I look forward to hearing from the community.
Vince Ciotti
Mechanical Designer
NX9, Teamcenter 10
Windows 7 Enterprise
Newport News, VA