Hello,
I am new to Fusion 360, I am familiar with using Inventor. So I created an assembly in Fusion 360 of multiple components and I now want to create tool paths for each of the individual components. I am not sure how to do this? Should have I created the tool path for each component as I created it? I'm sure there is a proper way to do this.
Thanks
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by Steinwerks. Go to Solution.
The simplest way is to make sure that the part you are programming is the only one in the Setup. You can simply hide the other components in the assembly while doing this and the CAM will ignore them.
Alternatively if you didn't want that much data in one place you could pull each part into its own assembly file in the project and link it back to the original so any changes will populate automatically. This really depends on how many parts you have to program, of course. If you have 100 I'd probably go this route, but less than ten the other can be much easier.
Sorry to bring a semi-unrelated question into a semi-old thread, but how do you "pull each part into its own assembly file in the project and link it back to the original"? It seems like the perfect answer to my headaches, but I can't seem to find out how to do it.
@novec001 wrote:
Sorry to bring a semi-unrelated question into a semi-old thread, but how do you "pull each part into its own assembly file in the project and link it back to the original"? It seems like the perfect answer to my headaches, but I can't seem to find out how to do it.
I just realized I have no assemblies to test this with! You can drag components from the Data Panel into saved files and use them as referenced components, but I have never tried pulling single components that exist in large assemblies. I'm sure there's a way, I just have to find out how.
I got access to a large assembly that a friend is using to build a 3D printer and so far all the obvious methods are failing. I will keep investigating though and see what I come up with.
Isolating the component in CAD before setting up CAM works, but it would be so much quicker and tidier to have a separate part in a separate window. When machining you're just working on one part at a time anyways.
The Fusion 360 team seems to have made a deliberate choice to keep every part of a model confined to one window at all times. That has its drawbacks, but also some clear benefits, and this old NX dog just has to get used to it.