You can create assembly views and assembly sheets for an assembly type. These drawings are always associated with a particular instance of the type, and only one instance of a type can have assembly views.
Aside from annotations, assembly detail views contain only those elements that make up the assembly instance. You can add annotations to an assembly view, rotate it, and edit the assembly itself by adding or removing elements.
You specify the particular views you want and other parameters in the Create Assembly Views dialog, which you can access in either of the following ways:
In the Create Assembly Views dialog, you select the types of views you want, select the desired scale, and (if Sheet is selected) specify title block information. Choose a template for each view and specify if the template will be assigned or applied. Available schedule view templates are determined by the types of elements in the assembly.
Assembly views always remain associated with the assembly instance for which they were created. If an edit to an assembly instance causes the instance to change from one assembly type to another, any assembly views belonging to the edited instance will be listed under the project browser node for the new assembly type. If the type you changed to already has assembly views, an error message informs you that one set of views will be deleted.
If you create additional section views within an assembly view, they inherit the assembly view's relationship to the assembly instance.
To place an assembly view on a sheet
After views have been placed on a sheet, you can expand the sheet's node in the Project Browser to see the list of views.
If you want to place the same view on more than one sheet for the same assembly, right-click the view name in the Project Browser, and click Duplicate View. For more information, see Duplicate a Detail View. Note that assembly views can also be placed on normal (non-assembly) sheets.