Dimensions in Synchronous
Dimensions in Synchronous
Solid Edge synchronous technology enables you to change how dimensions react to change on the fly. You don't have to change the "programming" of how sketch relations and parent/child relations are set up, you just tell it you want this end or that end to move, or move symmetrically. This is design intent on the fly. There is no feature order. There is no list of features or dependencies or parent/child stuff that you have to navigate.
This video is a little old, but check it out. 6 minutes. You're in control of that 1" dimension and the concentric hole doesn't determine what drives what (the hole or the cylindrical face).
This video is a little old, but check it out. 6 minutes. You're in control of that 1" dimension and the concentric hole doesn't determine what drives what (the hole or the cylindrical face).
Blog: http://dezignstuff.com
Re: Dimensions in Synchronous
Thanks for posting these here Matt. ST is so cool to use. If I had been in Solid Edge at a different job with different usage I would have taken hook line and sinker.
Well, maybe after ST4 or 5.
I think the power really shines in mixed mode. Thing is (my grasp of it) is to get started in sync one must forget just about everything they know about solid modeling. It was very difficult to get the ordered mode muscle memory out of my head.
Do they have much ST going in sheet metal yet?
Well, maybe after ST4 or 5.
I think the power really shines in mixed mode. Thing is (my grasp of it) is to get started in sync one must forget just about everything they know about solid modeling. It was very difficult to get the ordered mode muscle memory out of my head.
Do they have much ST going in sheet metal yet?
- Jaylin Hochstetler
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Re: Dimensions in Synchronous
Absolutely, https://solidedge.siemens.com/en/soluti ... al-design/. It puts SW in the dust.bnemec wrote: ↑Fri Apr 09, 2021 5:12 pm Thanks for posting these here Matt. ST is so cool to use. If I had been in Solid Edge at a different job with different usage I would have taken hook line and sinker.
Well, maybe after ST4 or 5.
I think the power really shines in mixed mode. Thing is (my grasp of it) is to get started in sync one must forget just about everything they know about solid modeling. It was very difficult to get the ordered mode muscle memory out of my head.
Do they have much ST going in sheet metal yet?
A goal is only a wish until backed by a plan.
Re: Dimensions in Synchronous
Here's another little video I just created to show controlling how dimensions react on the fly. I think this is powerful and brilliant.
Blog: http://dezignstuff.com
Re: Dimensions in Synchronous
Yeah, well I'm an old dude, I've got an excuse. Uh, did I leave something up there that I shouldn't have?
Blog: http://dezignstuff.com
- TusharSuradkar
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Re: Dimensions in Synchronous
@matt
A great deal of my understanding of synchronous has come from your videos, articles, and replies to QA on various forums.
Thank you once again for this old-is-gold video.
A great deal of my understanding of synchronous has come from your videos, articles, and replies to QA on various forums.
Thank you once again for this old-is-gold video.
Re: Dimensions in Synchronous
Thanks, Tushar. I hope all is going well for you.TusharSuradkar wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 8:51 am @matt
A great deal of my understanding of synchronous has come from your videos, articles, and replies to QA on various forums.
Thank you once again for this old-is-gold video.
Blog: http://dezignstuff.com
Re: Dimensions in Synchronous
You are correct..ST, in my opinion puts "design" back in the forefront- instead of history-based update strategy.
Re: Dimensions in Synchronous
the Siemens synchronous palette is fantastic, but I will beg to differ on the whole history-vs-amnesia thing... all us NXers can't just be a bunch of Neanderthals.
Re: Dimensions in Synchronous
Syncronous changes are handled differently in NX. They are actually all history-based edits in there. As for Neanderthals..maybe not quite? Maybe just Denisovan instead? ;-)