ongybill
Mechanical
- Feb 22, 2005
- 93
Just a note so others don't have the same problem I ran into yesterday.
After getting far into a complex cabinet assy I found that the 19" rack mount section was the wrong size.
Traced it down to some reference lines. Turns out that all CONSTRUCTION GEOMETRY is in centerline format (not changeable as far as I could find). So, when I dimensioned other lines from the construction lines it introduced a midpoint relationship so that when I typed in 1.75" spacing, it actually spaced the new lines at .875".
Big cabinet, and until I zoomed in later I couldn't tell that the dimension was not between the 2 lines as I thought, but between the line and a point in space 1/2 way beyond the construction line.
This was for the 2nd of many features added to the cabinet. By the time I moved all the child features to where they should have been in the first place I ended up with a model with 12 solid bodies instead of 1.
Anyway, just a friendly warning. Construction Geometry isn't really just "reference geometry" like with most software. It's a centerline, and there may be hidden relationships (ie diameter dimensioning) that you're not aware of and are undesirable, so be careful.
After getting far into a complex cabinet assy I found that the 19" rack mount section was the wrong size.
Traced it down to some reference lines. Turns out that all CONSTRUCTION GEOMETRY is in centerline format (not changeable as far as I could find). So, when I dimensioned other lines from the construction lines it introduced a midpoint relationship so that when I typed in 1.75" spacing, it actually spaced the new lines at .875".
Big cabinet, and until I zoomed in later I couldn't tell that the dimension was not between the 2 lines as I thought, but between the line and a point in space 1/2 way beyond the construction line.
This was for the 2nd of many features added to the cabinet. By the time I moved all the child features to where they should have been in the first place I ended up with a model with 12 solid bodies instead of 1.
Anyway, just a friendly warning. Construction Geometry isn't really just "reference geometry" like with most software. It's a centerline, and there may be hidden relationships (ie diameter dimensioning) that you're not aware of and are undesirable, so be careful.