crimsonlake
Our company implemented PDMWorks a couple of years ago (we were one of the first companies in southern California to do). As the department cad administrator I had many such questions that needed to be answered prior to and after the implementation. We had originally implemented “Smart Team” followed by “Quicksilver DDM”. We had limited success with both applications for several varying reasons. RawheadRex and Gildashard were both right in their assessment that PDMWorks does not fully track configurations, although they have made a number of improvements to the software that allow configurations revisions to be tracked in the Solidworks configuration specific properties of the Solidworks model files. PDMWorks are (I am told) in the process of adding some more functionality to the software that will better deal with configuration properties.
In our companies case we wanted to present our component models in a much more real world approach, so we adopted the use of the “Base Part” technique to deal with variants of our model files, for example: we manufacture a lot of die cast components that are machined at different levels of complexity depending on the application usage, these components have different part numbers and may or may not need to revised independently. The old system that we used was (as you had mentioned earlier) adding different configurations to document all of the different versions of the casting, “As Cast”, “As Machined” etc, leaving us in the same situation as your company. By using the “Base Part” method (now known in Solidworks as “Insert Part”), we have the ability to model and revise our machined components independently whilst still maintaining that associative link to casting model. This represents much more of a real world approach to the modeling of such parts, since the features that belong to the casting are in the casting model and only the features that belong to the particular machined version of the component reside in that particular model file. In short the above scenario allows PDMWorks to deal with our old configurations as separate model files, and from a design point of view we get the added benefit that some of our older and excruciatingly slow mutli-configuration model files are now very simple to edit and we don’t spend our days sitting around waiting for model rebuilds.
There are many different solutions to the configuration issue within PDMWorks. We had numerous issues to overcome in our PDMWorks implementation and so far we have found all of the answers that we needed.
John Cole
Sr Mechanical Engineer
Impco Technologies, Inc.