Create internal frame and external frame assemblies for machines from the assembly and weldment environments.
Use Frame Generator to create internal frame and external frame assemblies for machines. Frame Generator is available in the assembly and weldment environments.
You need a skeleton part on which to insert frame members. You can either:
You can select sketch lines and edges from multiple parts to add to a skeletal part. As you select lines and edges, they are added to a skeletal part in the frame assembly.
In the finished frame assembly, each frame member must have a corresponding line in the reference skeleton part.
In the process to insert a frame member into an assembly, you select a Frame Member family from the Content Center. Then you define the size, material, and appearance parameters. After you select the frame member, you select one or more edges or a beginning and ending point for placement of the frame member.
After you place frame members onto the structure, you add end treatments. End treatments specify the miters and cuts to join them. For a straight frame member with a miter on each end, such as an angled beam between two opposite inside corners, the correct frame length computes automatically.
Frame Generator automates both the selection and placement of the standard frame members onto the skeleton or assembly components, and the addition of end treatments. For a frame member with a double miter (miter on each end), such as an angled beam between two opposite corners, the correct frame length computes automatically.
You can reuse identical straight frame members to cut down on the total number of identical files. After reuse, you can change the geometry selection and the positional input for the frame member to reuse. Reuse is not available for curved members. A window cross-select is available to select multiple frame members at a time for reuse.
To change end treatments for reused frame members successfully, first change the end treatment on the source member, and then reuse it.
Frame members are named by default using (Standard)+(Stock Number)+(Unique Number). To customize the naming convention, navigate to the File tab in Application Options, and then select File Naming Defaults. Customize the assembly and frame member naming options in the Frame Generator tab. For example, click the + symbol to add the Stock Number attribute to the file name.
Frame Generator is integrated with Content Center. You can define your own frame cross-sections and add them to the available Content Center libraries for use within Frame Generator.
For more information about defining your own frame shapes, see the topic.
A driven dimension feature called Driven Length is added to frame members during the authoring and migrating process in Frame Generator. Driven Length calculates the correct value (G_L) for the extrusion length in a frame member. The parameter of the driven dimension is assigned to G_L.
When the driven dimension feature is added to the sketch, it is also listed in the browser as Driven Length. The entities created with the dimension feature are nested under Driven Length. To see them, use the Explode command, which is available on the context menu in Frame Generator.
The Driven Length feature protects the sketch and the reference dimension from inadvertent modification.
Frame Generator maintains an updated parts list and ballooning to the associated BOM. Create a cut list to document frame members and their dimensions and cut treatments. Use the Drawing Manager Parts List utility to produce a parts-only BOM, and then add appropriate columns for the cut list. See the Help topic BOMs and Cut Lists
The following commands are located on the Design tab in the Assembly and Weldment environment. Structural Shape Authoring is located on the Manage tab in the part environment.
You can insert frame members using the points, lines, and edges, listed:
As soon as you insert the first frame member into an assembly, a hierarchy for the frame is added to the assembly browser. See the Help topic Frame Generator browser.
Be sure to check out the guided tutorial gallery for hands-on experience creating and analyzing frames.