Create Assembly models by placing existing components into an assembly, and by creating other components in place within the context of the assembly.
An Autodesk Inventor assembly model is a collection of parts and subassemblies that function as a single unit. Parts and subassemblies are connected by assembly relationships. Relationships control component placement and DOF (Degrees of Freedom).
A Weldment assembly is an extension of the assembly modeling environment. In a weldment, you can model welds and add machining features before and after weld features.
For more information, see About the Weldments environment.
Subassemblies are a group of parts that function together as a single unit. When you insert an assembly in another assembly file, it is referred to as a subassembly. Select components in the browser and use the Demote option in the context menu to create an assembly component without leaving the parent assembly.
Example: An air-cylinder assembly that is inserted into other assemblies and used in multiple positions is a subassembly.
To complete an assembly model, apply the assembly features. Assembly features are cut operations that often describe specific manufacturing processes such as post-machining, match drilling, or pinning. Assembly features reside in the assembly, not the individual component files.
Tip: Use a multibody part to create shared features.