Cable and Harness nailboards and nailboard views support the Autodesk Inventor bill of materials for all harness objects except segments and splices. This means all harness objects with a unique part number, including all virtual parts associated to an existing harness object, are listed as separate components in the BOM.
In Cable and Harness sometimes cut-length items such as wires, cables, ribbon cables, and looms that are represented with unique part numbers in the BOM need to be 'rolled up' and treated as one object. This is done by using the Stock Number property. All other harness objects of the same type with the same part number are rolled up by default.
After you create a nailboard or nailboard drawing view, you can add a parts list. A parts list is generated from a BOM and shows all or only certain parts and subassemblies listed in the BOM database.
With a nailboard drawing active, click Annotate tab Table panel
Parts List .
In the Parts List dialog box, browse to and select the harness assembly file to use. (Do not select the parent assembly file.)
Click OK.
In the graphics window, click a location to place the table.
You can modify the settings for a parts list after you place it in the drawing or nailboard. You can right-click the parts list in the browser or in the graphic window, and then select options to change the display and other elements of the parts list.
To prepare harness objects for roll-up in the BOM, you must add a custom stock number property and value for each object to include.
Once the Stock Number property and value is added to the appropriate objects and a parts list is placed on the nailboard drawing, you can initiate a roll-up. When you roll up by Stock Number, the length in the parts list represents the total length of the objects combined into 1 entry on the BOM.
You print nailboards and standard drawings that include harness assemblies using standard Autodesk Inventor printing capabilities. The tiling capability enables you to print a single drawing across multiple pages, which is key when printing nailboards or other large drawings. Registration marks are printed on page corners to allow alignment of printed pages. Page identifiers contain the drawing and sheet name and a table cell number to help keep pages in order.
You can print a single sheet, a range of sheets, or all sheets in the active drawing.
Click File Print.
In the Print Drawing dialog box, set the print range, scale, and number of copies. If necessary, you can click Properties to open the Print Setup dialog box, and then change the paper size and orientation.
If the drawing is too large to fit on one sheet, click File Print. On the Print Drawing dialog box, in the Scale box, select Model 1:1, and then select the Tiling Enabled check box.
If necessary, select Preview to confirm your expected prints.
Click OK to print.
Refer to Autodesk Inventor Help for details on other printing options:
By default, splices in a harness assembly are not included in a standard Autodesk Inventor drawing. You must include the splices manually before they are displayed. Harness changes to one view do not update any other views in the drawing.
Open or create a drawing of an assembly that includes a wire harness.
In the Drawing Manager browser, expand a view, and then navigate to the harness assembly in which to recover the splices.
Right-click the harness assembly, and then select Include Splices from the context menu.
Like nailboard drawings, splices that do not contain wires are excluded from the drawing.
By default, centerlines of wires, cables, and segments in a harness assembly are not included in a standard Autodesk Inventor drawing. You must specifically include the centerlines for each harness object type in a drawing view. Harness changes to one view do not update any other views in the drawing.
Open or create a drawing of an assembly that includes a wire harness.
In the Drawing Manager browser, expand a view, and then navigate to the harness assembly in which to recover centerlines.
Right-click the harness assembly, select Include Centerlines, and then select the harness object to include. You can include any combination of wires, cables, and segments in the harness assembly.
All centerlines used for wires, cable wires, and segments with at least one routed wire, are included in the graphics window. Like nailboard drawings, segments that do not contain wires are excluded from the drawing.