Thanks, you say the right words @ the beginning: "Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't" - and sometimes I go crazy with NX, because I like to practice exactly step by step what you do and all of the sudden something is wrong. BUT GENERALLY IS THIS VIDEO GREAT!!!! THANKS AGAIN!!
Nice tutorial. I realize this is a simple tutorial but it does demonstrate the issue I have ran into with engineers for the last 20 years in my manufacturing career. No one should ever datum a part the way you did. Tangent points on arcs for datums really? Datums are meant to specify method of measuring and manufacturing a part. You have a primary, secondary and tertiary datum which should constrain the features to be controlled. Primary controls level(angle) of the part Secondary should control rotation and tertiary should specify an origin. In simplest terms Plane, Line, Point. Also flatness along with straightness, roundness etc.. requires no datum reference whatsoever leave off the datum A. It seems like engineers can draw all sorts of things well but fall short when dimensioning parts to be measured or manufactured. Like dimensioning things to projected imaginary points out in space that you have no hope of being able to measure or control in the real world. Is GD&T a requirement for engineering students? If it is they should spend more time emphasizing the importance of it. I have seen the same issues in small companies all the way up to one of the largest aerospace companies in the world.
Hi, Thanks for this video I've doubt, hope you'll solve this When I do 2d In Nx and convert it in to Autocad. In that autocad file some of the dimensions are editable but some auto convert in block (those dimensions are not editable). Is there any way to get rid of this problem?
Great video! Im switching from Solidworks to NX, its been very useful!
Thanks, you say the right words @ the beginning: "Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't" - and sometimes I go crazy with NX, because I like to practice exactly step by step what you do and all of the sudden something is wrong. BUT GENERALLY IS THIS VIDEO GREAT!!!! THANKS AGAIN!!
Congratulations! Nice tutorial!
thx sir for making my basic course easy
Nice tutorial. I realize this is a simple tutorial but it does demonstrate the issue I have ran into with engineers for the last 20 years in my manufacturing career. No one should ever datum a part the way you did. Tangent points on arcs for datums really? Datums are meant to specify method of measuring and manufacturing a part. You have a primary, secondary and tertiary datum which should constrain the features to be controlled. Primary controls level(angle) of the part Secondary should control rotation and tertiary should specify an origin. In simplest terms Plane, Line, Point. Also flatness along with straightness, roundness etc.. requires no datum reference whatsoever leave off the datum A. It seems like engineers can draw all sorts of things well but fall short when dimensioning parts to be measured or manufactured. Like dimensioning things to projected imaginary points out in space that you have no hope of being able to measure or control in the real world. Is GD&T a requirement for engineering students? If it is they should spend more time emphasizing the importance of it. I have seen the same issues in small companies all the way up to one of the largest aerospace companies in the world.
It is really helpful.
Very helpful. Thanks.
Hi, Thanks for this video
I've doubt, hope you'll solve this
When I do 2d In Nx and convert it in to Autocad.
In that autocad file some of the dimensions are editable but some auto convert in block (those dimensions are not editable).
Is there any way to get rid of this problem?
Every time I try to open datum feature symbol i get "null labels not permited" error. Does anybody know how I can fix this?
How Limit the Boundery of Part