Assembly orbit doesn't match part orbit!!!

Assembly orbit doesn't match part orbit!!!

daryldXG9UW
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Message 1 of 10

Assembly orbit doesn't match part orbit!!!

daryldXG9UW
Participant
Participant

I don't get it!!  I created a skeleton in a seperate .ipt file.  Brought it in the assembly on the zx plane.  Everything is centered.  I created a new part in the assembly and chose the zx plane, since I brought the skeleton in on the zx plane.  I was starting a sketch in the part I created and was going to choose the zx plane in the part, but the zx is in the xy plane in the assembly environment (see attached)....go figure.  Can anyone help?

origin dont match 2.png

 

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Message 2 of 10

kacper.suchomski
Mentor
Mentor

What version of the program are you using?

 


Kacper Suchomski

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Message 3 of 10

BDCollett
Advisor
Advisor

@daryldXG9UW wrote:

I don't get it!!  I created a skeleton in a seperate .ipt file.  Brought it in the assembly on the zx plane.  Everything is centered.  I created a new part in the assembly and chose the zx plane, since I brought the skeleton in on the zx plane.  I was starting a sketch in the part I created and was going to choose the zx plane in the part, but the zx is in the xy plane in the assembly environment (see attached)....go figure.  Can anyone help?

origin dont match 2.png

 


Can you share the files?

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Message 4 of 10

johnsonshiue
Community Manager
Community Manager
Accepted solution

Hi! I think this is about inconsistent ViewCube orientation. I think you want to have Z-axis pointing upward (top). Plese take a look at attached video and make the same change for your iam and ipt files (including templates).

For this particular assembly, you need to unground the part and go to Productivity Tools -> Ground and Root. Then their origin planes will be aligned.

Many thanks!



Johnson Shiue (johnson.shiue@autodesk.com)
Software Test Engineer
Message 5 of 10

daryldXG9UW
Participant
Participant

Ok, that worked.

 

Thank you!!!!

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Message 6 of 10

daryldXG9UW
Participant
Participant

I was wondering if you can help me with this problem.  I'm trying to get a positive direction on the opposed mate.  I need the end panels to be opposite of each other.  I also have symmetry on them.  I tried everything.  See attached.

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Message 7 of 10

JDMather
Consultant
Consultant

@daryldXG9UW 

Can you Attach your assembly here?


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Message 8 of 10

daryldXG9UW
Participant
Participant

Sure

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Message 9 of 10

SBix26
Consultant
Consultant
Accepted solution

There's absolutely nothing wrong with having a negative mate constraint offset!

 

No, there is not a way to make that a positive number unless you constrain the interior faces of those two parts, which would then be 48 in - 2 * thickness.  A mate constraint always has the face normals pointing in opposite directions, while a flush constraint points the normals in the same direction.

 

I might suggest using multi-solid master modeling technique for this, though, which mostly eliminates the need for constraints in the assembly.


Sam B

Inventor Pro 2024.2 | Windows 10 Home 22H2
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Message 10 of 10

daryldXG9UW
Participant
Participant
Ok, I figured as much.

Thanks
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