Hi, I'm very new to Inventor and have a simple question. I have a document with two bodies. I would like to move one of the bodies from its current location, but I'm unable to. If I click the green botton on top, in the option 'Select bodies', both of the parts are selected. If I click on 'Modify' > 'Move Bodies', it also selects both bodies, and the cursor to manually select the bodies is disabled. Could this be because I have constraints that I'm not aware of? I'm attaching the file. Thanks!
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi, I'm very new to Inventor and have a simple question. I have a document with two bodies. I would like to move one of the bodies from its current location, but I'm unable to. If I click the green botton on top, in the option 'Select bodies', both of the parts are selected. If I click on 'Modify' > 'Move Bodies', it also selects both bodies, and the cursor to manually select the bodies is disabled. Could this be because I have constraints that I'm not aware of? I'm attaching the file. Thanks!
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by mcgyvr. Go to Solution.
Solved by JDMather. Go to Solution.
Looking in your history tree - you have only a single disjointed body.
Right click on the Revolution1 and select Edit Feature.
Select the New Body option.
In Inventor a part is a part (just like the real world) - file format *.ipt (Inventor Part).
In Inventor an assembly is a collection of parts (or sub-assemblies) as components (just like the real world) - file format *.iam (Inventor Assembly).
It looks to me like you really intended for this to be an assembly of two (or more) parts, so I would create these as separate parts (just like the real world).
You could do this as multi-body solids in one part file, but I don't think that is your true Design Intent.
Looking in your history tree - you have only a single disjointed body.
Right click on the Revolution1 and select Edit Feature.
Select the New Body option.
In Inventor a part is a part (just like the real world) - file format *.ipt (Inventor Part).
In Inventor an assembly is a collection of parts (or sub-assemblies) as components (just like the real world) - file format *.iam (Inventor Assembly).
It looks to me like you really intended for this to be an assembly of two (or more) parts, so I would create these as separate parts (just like the real world).
You could do this as multi-body solids in one part file, but I don't think that is your true Design Intent.
edit: Ha ha.. I see JD modified his post and now I'm like a Parrot...
As stated your part only has a single body (even though it looks like 2 you modeled them all under the single body.. disjointed).. (see the solid bodies folder in the top of the model browser)
I think you may be going about this incorrectly though..
While multiple solid bodies is something Inventor can accomplish and is used often I would think that as a new user what you really wanted to do was model 2 parts (ipt files) and then create an assembly (iam file) of those parts vs trying to do everything in a single part file.
Multibody modeling techniques are a more advanced functionality in Inventor and not something I would recommend a new user start with..
Each "real world" part should get its own "part/ipt" file in Inventor and then you place those parts into an assembly file and constrain them just like in the real world..
edit: Ha ha.. I see JD modified his post and now I'm like a Parrot...
As stated your part only has a single body (even though it looks like 2 you modeled them all under the single body.. disjointed).. (see the solid bodies folder in the top of the model browser)
I think you may be going about this incorrectly though..
While multiple solid bodies is something Inventor can accomplish and is used often I would think that as a new user what you really wanted to do was model 2 parts (ipt files) and then create an assembly (iam file) of those parts vs trying to do everything in a single part file.
Multibody modeling techniques are a more advanced functionality in Inventor and not something I would recommend a new user start with..
Each "real world" part should get its own "part/ipt" file in Inventor and then you place those parts into an assembly file and constrain them just like in the real world..
Can't find what you're looking for? Ask the community or share your knowledge.