Proper way to use adaptivity
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report
I could really use some help with the proper way(s) to use adaptivity.
I've used Inventor for literally thousands of hours, but using adaptivity for even the simplest of applications always, always, always results in broken assemblies when I try to use it. It might work at first, but once I make just the wrong change to my assembly, suddenly two or three parts which adapted fine before decide not to adapt, and I end up with several sick constraints. Even a Rebuild All will not repair the assembly.
In its simplest form, this is all I want to do:
I want to constrain one end of a part (such as a steel member) to one face, and constrain the other end to another face, and have the member change its length if the distance between the two faces changes.
That's it.
I could spend a couple hours describing all the ways I've tried to do this, but the short and sweet is that I'm very careful not to create unsolvable adaptivity situations. I always build my parts and constrain them so that there is one and only one correct "solution" to the constraints.
So, I'd like to hear the ways you all use adaptivity that work. Any tried-and-true methods would be greatly, greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.