Hello,
I have the following problem: I have a part in an assembly, which can rotate around an axis. The extremes of its valid range (initial and final position of the movement) can be defined by two different Mate constraints, see the attached picture: an axis of the rotating part must be mated to two different axes in the model, indicated by the yellow work axes.
I want to put a stop-pin into the round part, which would define the end-of-the-movement of the rotating part in the real assembly. I made this adaptively in the assembly: I created the final-position constraint, and edited the round part adaptively.
Now if I create another positional representation, I can not create any more constraints. So still in the Master positional representation, I created another constraint for the initial position, which I suppressed there.
If I create now a new positional representation, I can suppress the final-position constraint, but when I try to enable the initial-position constraint, I get the error message
Errors occurred during update: Position1: compute failure in Positional representation. A cross part association has failed.
Can this problem be solved?
The documentation sais "In a positional representation, adaptivity is deferred", and when the positional representation Position1 is active, the "Adaptive" menu entry of the adaptive round part is inactive in the context-menu, so intuitively I thought that its adaptivity is only active in the "Master" positional representation, exactly what I would want. But it doesn't seem to behave that way....
I am using Autodesk Inventor Professional 2012
Thank you
Daniel
Where is Screenshot
Adaptivity wont work with the combination of positional Representation
You may need to suppress some of the constraints to get the positional representations to appear properly. you can set up different design reps with some constraints on and off.
elise moss
also I have a tutorial you can download from my website on view representations you might find helpful.
It seems you forgot to attach your screen shot.
To solve your problem I would set your pin to the length you need (using the adaptivity as a tool) and then take the adaptivity away, make it a fixed length.
I use adaptive subassemblies in some positional representations. Their adaptive lengths are set in their assemblies. I use level of detail to work with different subassemblies that use the same adaptive parts. I can have only one subassembly active (not suppressed) at a time.
Rebuild All is useful.
Hi,
I also did first what you suggested: make the length fixed (i.e. make the part non-associative after crating the pinhole). But the design was not 100% fixed, and I optimized some dimensions - and forgot to update the pinhole position.
In fact, the way I tried to do this DOES work with the following two annoying things:
- When I activate the problematic initial-position positional representation, nothing happens, I need to slightly drag the part in question, and then it jumps to the correct position
- The quoted error message pops up, which I simply need to Accept, and that's it. The pinhole position remains in its correct place.
It might be easier to constrain your motion with one angle mate. You can set limits for the angle in the constraint dialog box. Then set your positional representations; modify the constraint and set the angle to what you need for each position. Choose your angle mating surfaces conveniently; you might need to create a work plane.