092961,
I have used stacks of split item balloons to show how many fasteners are required to attach specific parts. This is particularly helpful when you are using the same screw, over and over again. Using the same screw over and over again is good design practice.
My box, item 15 is attached using 4X item_22. Another box, item 28 is attached using 6X item_22. The parts list will show at least QTY_6 of item_22.
SolidWorks does not support this, but the work-around is trivial. I systematically customize the QTY part of the split balloon. Changes to the parts list will be caused by me using the screws elsewhere, and the action tracked by the parts list. If I do change the number of screws in the part, I know I must fix my assembly drawing. Again, the parts list will be correct.
I would use the split item balloons if at all possible, because I would not want to have to keep your "2X" text next to the balloons as I moved stuff around. Your drawing will quickly turn into a mess. I am still on SW2003. Perhaps the newer versions allow you to attach text to item balloons?
You need a convention on what it means when 2X item_15 is attached by 4X item_22. Is that a total of four screws, or is it 2X2? I prefer the absolute total.
In the past, on a drafting board or on 2D ACAD, I have carefully placed the 2X right next to the balloon. I used curly brackets to quantify the entire balloon stack. As noted above, I would not dare do this on 3D CAD like SolidWorks.
I have seen a number of people create balloon stacks of fifteen to twenty parts. I hate this. As an assembly instruction or specification, it is practically useless.
JHG