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assembly model to Autocad LT

9 REPLIES 9
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Message 1 of 10
Anonymous
1067 Views, 9 Replies

assembly model to Autocad LT

Evening,

 

I have a query please

 

Can an assembly model developed in Inventor be saved as a view style -"Wire Frame with Visible Edges Only" and then exported to Autocad LT to be saved and used as a symbol for PFD/P&ID ?

 

Regards,

 

Joseph

9 REPLIES 9
Message 2 of 10
Mark.Lancaster
in reply to: Anonymous

Yes but that "dwg" or block may be large (file) size. You may want reduce by using shrinkwrap or use the BOM exchange workflow but just don't export to a Autodesk Exchange or Revit file.

 

Usually P&I'D drawings are 2d so taking a true solid model from Inventor to this type of drawing seems overkill.  Okay me 2 cents

Mark Lancaster


  &  Autodesk Services MarketPlace Provider


Autodesk Inventor Certified Professional & not an Autodesk Employee


Likes is much appreciated if the information I have shared is helpful to you and/or others


Did this resolve your issue? Please accept it "As a Solution" so others may benefit from it.

Message 3 of 10
johnsonshiue
in reply to: Anonymous

Hi! There might be three possibilities that I can think of at the moment.

 

Option1: Export the Inventor assembly as IGES and set export object type to Wireframe. Use IGESIN command to import the IGES file to AutoCAD LT.

 

Option2: Export the assembly as AutoCAD DWG -> check only Solids. Open the DWG file to LT and explode it to wires.

 

Option3: Export the assembly as SAT. Use ACISIN command to import the SAT file to LT and explode it to wires.

 

Many thanks!

 



Johnson Shiue (johnson.shiue@autodesk.com)
Software Test Engineer
Message 4 of 10
Anonymous
in reply to: johnsonshiue

Hi Johnson,

 

Thanks for the options.

 

I have attached a sample image of what i would like to achieve. Does this fit in with your 3 options?

 

Regards

 

Joseph

Message 5 of 10
johnsonshiue
in reply to: Anonymous

Hi! It looks like you only need 2D geometry, not 3D. If you only need 2D, you should simply create Inventor drawing using dwg. Then you can open the dwg in LT. I don't think you need to go through the trouble of converting 3D geometry to wires and then import to LT.

It is still a bit unclear to me what you are looking for. If you could provide an example of Inventor assembly and what you expect to do in LT, experts here should be able to help suggest the best workflow to achieve it.

Many thanks!



Johnson Shiue (johnson.shiue@autodesk.com)
Software Test Engineer
Message 6 of 10
Anonymous
in reply to: johnsonshiue

Thank you Johnson

I attached 3 images

 

1. 3D model of assembly

2. 3D model side view (2D colour)

3. 3D model as a Wire view in 2D.....this is the appearance i would like to use in Autocad....

 

Regards

 

Joseph

 

Message 7 of 10
Mark.Lancaster
in reply to: Anonymous

@Anonymous

 

My 2 cents..  You are making this way too hard..  P&ID doesn't truly represent what the actual product looks like in the real world.  Its a 2D representation.  by symbols demonstrating the process flow/equipment (symbols) used.   What does the rest of your P&ID look like?  Does it actual show the true valves or the normal 2D symbol representing the valve.

Mark Lancaster


  &  Autodesk Services MarketPlace Provider


Autodesk Inventor Certified Professional & not an Autodesk Employee


Likes is much appreciated if the information I have shared is helpful to you and/or others


Did this resolve your issue? Please accept it "As a Solution" so others may benefit from it.

Message 8 of 10
Anonymous
in reply to: Mark.Lancaster

Hi Mark

 

Thanks for response

 

I agree regarding symbols in P&ID but i plan to go down the path as the image attached. I already have some of the Assembly models done and am looking for a way to use as 2D blocks in Autocad

 

Best regards

 

Joseph

 

 

Message 9 of 10
Anonymous
in reply to: Anonymous

Hi,

 

I thought i would continue on with this query and see if anyone else has some suggestions

 

Regards

 

Joseph

Message 10 of 10
mcgyvr
in reply to: Anonymous


@Anonymous wrote:

Hi,

 

I thought i would continue on with this query and see if anyone else has some suggestions

 

Regards

 

Joseph


Just create a drawing in Inventor and save copy as Autocad dwg..

In autocad open the file and type "overkill" into the command line and select all objects..

Delete whatever else you don't want to show in your symbol.

Then purge the drawing and save..

 

Thats all you need...

really simple.. 



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