I learned these things myself after spending a long time. Your tips are super great for beginners and also professionals too. Best of the best series of Solidworks ever met.
For number 3 tip, I higly recommend to use the sheet scale properties instead of change it in the view. The sheet information panel shows the sheet scale, not the view. Which can lead to some catastrophic moment😅. One time I got my sheet metal in 2:1 size. The information panel said it was 1:1… laser cutter put the dxf on the machine without any check and boom. It was a high priority part so my boss was not amused 😅.
I was actually interested that you design catheters. Looong ago I worked in a cardiac cath lab, so I know what those are. But I never thought about who was making them. Kind of cool.
@@with-Aryan I was in on some of the first coronary angioplasty procedures. We even had balloon catheters burst. I'm guessing your designs have to be reviewed by physicians or something. Anyways this is off topic. Interesting though.
Excellent video! Tips are always helpful! Tips on how to customize flyouts, mouse gestures, shorten selection boxes, etc. might be considered. Also Solidworks usually comes with a rendering add-on which I believe is RealView. Lastly, I have "motion" which allows you to animate your designs and save as a video. Tips on these would be great as well!. If you have already covered these, please let me know the link to view. Thanks!
GREAT I REALLY LIKE YOUR VIDEOS AND PROFESIONALLITY.. THIS ARE HARD TIMES AND I CAN T PAY MY SELF SUCH A LUXURY BUY I ENCOURAGE YOU TO KEEP ON GOING YOUR ACKNOLEDGEMENT IS A A FANTASTIC OPPORTUNITY FOR A LOT OF YOUNGS THAT NEEDS THIS OPPORTUNITY.. THANKS FOR ME AND FOR THEM!
Thank you very much, Aryan! I did learn new things from your tutorial! It was very clear and I will mark it as a favorite and keep it in my list of great tutorials! I am a CSWP, but realize that Solidworks is life-long learning situation. Great job!
Sir ,could u please upload a vedio on how to decide the tolerance values for a particular component, I mean wheather there is any STANDARDS or simply we can give any kind of values
Oh only if it was that easy. Tolerancing is a vast topic and you need to understand WHAT is it that you are defining a tolerance for. A tolerance on a heart valve is different than a tolerance on a truck's bumper than a gear on a car's engine! Every component deals with a different range of tolerances. To understand it better, look for tolerancing and in general after that GD&T
If you apply different configurations in length, is there a way to control the break lines position to always stay parallel in the drawing in the different configurations.
In SolidWorks, bounding boxes are automatically generated to fit the exact size of the component, so you can't directly make them smaller. They're intended to provide the exact outer dimensions of a part or assembly. However, there are a few workarounds you could try if you're looking to reduce the appearance of the bounding box in your drawings: Hide Bounding Box: If the bounding box is not necessary for your drawings, you can hide it. To do this, go to the FeatureManager design tree, find the bounding box under the solid bodies folder, right click on it and select "Hide." Change View Scale: If the bounding box appears too large in relation to other components in the drawing, you can adjust the view scale to make everything appear smaller. This doesn't shrink the bounding box itself, but it does make everything in the view, including the bounding box, appear smaller. Use Break View: If your weldment is long and thin causing the bounding box to be large in the drawing, you might want to use the "Break View" option. This allows you to remove sections of the part in the drawing view, effectively reducing the size of the bounding box as displayed.
all you have to do is to go to the settings, and in the search bar there, type arrow, then it brings you to the page where you can change the dim types
@@with-Aryan I did a google search and found out about ordinate dimensioning. That is the dimensioning you have on the top left. That is what i am doing on a practice part i am drawing.
Hi Aryan the tips you provided is quite beneficial for me but can you elaborate your seventh point as if you want to gave dimensions to your whole drawing it could be messy so it's quite hectic for you to give dimensions one by one.is there any way to solve this
@@with-Aryan hello sir, When we creat part we add chamfers for the sharp corners of the body and we import that part in drawing we get chamfer lines in the part which become bit messy and unclear to recognise original part body lines so my question is that how can we edit those chamfer lines in drawing.
Maybe little bit of nit picking regarding the first tip and specifically the last 3 options of tolerances - to my knowledge they are not only for pins - but for all ISO Limits and Fits. Very useful when defining fits for shafts and bores.
Sir, how can i add auto balloon to individual assembly parts drawing & link the number to part same as assembly drawing as the bom table, part name etc linked , Hope you understand if not please let me know . To do this i put number manually as text ,one by one for all parts
a bit tricky, I hope I don't forget this in January, but once I am back iN jan, I will make a video about this, a great idea. If you didn't see it on my channel, please remind me. I would explain it here if it could be explaianed through text
@@with-Aryan thanks Sir ,i like the way you explain with ease ,I'm daily Solidworks user improving my solidworks skills day by day . I have many Questions to ask you , hope i got answered 😊
First, open the assembly file that contains the part with configurations. Now, go to the "Insert" menu, navigate to "Tables" and select "Bill of Materials". In the "Bill of Materials" property manager, you will see the option for "BOM Type". Here you can choose "Parts only" or "Indented" to display each configuration of a part as a separate item in the BOM. After the table is inserted, right-click on the table and select "BOM table" to display the BOM property manager again. In the "BOM Options" section, select the checkbox for "Display configurations of the same part as separate items". Click "OK" to apply the changes.
@@with-Aryan I mean that when I make a view and its projected view, and I go back to the first view to make a broken view, the projected view does not follow. thank you.
salam, chon Irania hamishe talabkaran, ghor mizanan va donbale iraadan. che kar konam? dasto ta arenj bokoni to asal bezari dahanesho baz gaz migiran. Che komaki?
Well, calling these tips is a bit of a stretch. Maybe "tools you learned recently?" Also, that hole callout is showing a wrong depth for your holes as the part is only 5mm thick where the holes are. Otherwise, good video.
I actually sent this comment last year but wanted to reiterate. Your English is great but your content would be sooooo much more enjoyable if i didn’t have to keep rewinding because of your mis pronunciation of some words. Maybe you feel you have to speak rapidly. I promise, your “slow” is very fast to us and jumbled up. Please SLOW DOWN YOUR SPEECH. with all respect. Thank you. Chris
Thank you for the tips! I would really like your videos more if you removed your face from the screen, I don’t think it is necessary, we need to hear you and see the whole screen as much as possible, nothing against you, I just find it very obstructing, besides, what is the purpose of your face there?
Watch my webinar ▶ bit.ly/SCPNewSeries
I learned these things myself after spending a long time. Your tips are super great for beginners and also professionals too. Best of the best series of Solidworks ever met.
For number 3 tip, I higly recommend to use the sheet scale properties instead of change it in the view. The sheet information panel shows the sheet scale, not the view. Which can lead to some catastrophic moment😅. One time I got my sheet metal in 2:1 size. The information panel said it was 1:1… laser cutter put the dxf on the machine without any check and boom. It was a high priority part so my boss was not amused 😅.
Thanks for sharing!
With right-click to the view you can add a label to the view, if it has a different scale.
I was actually interested that you design catheters. Looong ago I worked in a cardiac cath lab, so I know what those are. But I never thought about who was making them. Kind of cool.
yeah, thanks, I'm a person who is also designing them
@@with-Aryan I was in on some of the first coronary angioplasty procedures. We even had balloon catheters burst. I'm guessing your designs have to be reviewed by physicians or something. Anyways this is off topic. Interesting though.
@@Gkuljian yes they have to. I've done those but mainly TAVI
ARYAN, You do such a great job coming across clearly about how to execute commands in SolidWorks. appreciate what you post here on RUclips.
glad it works for you Victor
Excellent video! Tips are always helpful! Tips on how to customize flyouts, mouse gestures, shorten selection boxes, etc. might be considered. Also Solidworks usually comes with a rendering add-on which I believe is RealView. Lastly, I have "motion" which allows you to animate your designs and save as a video. Tips on these would be great as well!. If you have already covered these, please let me know the link to view. Thanks!
got them here courses.solidworkstutorials.net/webinar-registration?sl=sheetmetal
Make sure to watch it
GREAT I REALLY LIKE YOUR VIDEOS AND PROFESIONALLITY.. THIS ARE HARD TIMES AND I CAN T PAY MY SELF SUCH A LUXURY BUY I ENCOURAGE YOU TO KEEP ON GOING YOUR ACKNOLEDGEMENT IS A A FANTASTIC OPPORTUNITY FOR A LOT OF YOUNGS THAT NEEDS THIS OPPORTUNITY.. THANKS FOR ME AND FOR THEM!
This a very good way to give us tips. Thanks again
Always welcome
This work you sharing with us is amazing. thank you !
Very glad to hear that!
Very useful let's have more please.👍👏
Thank you very much, Aryan! I did learn new things from your tutorial! It was very clear and I will mark it as a favorite and keep it in my list of great tutorials! I am a CSWP, but realize that Solidworks is life-long learning situation. Great job!
means a lot, thanks Eddie
I enjoy this type of video very much! Thank you
you are welcome
U are my hero thanx for your help.
Happy to help
Need more videos like this!
I've been very busy recently and my focus was on building my next course on GD&T
Thank you for you share your knowledge to us. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
you are very welcome. Thanks for watching
Thanks! Very useful tips!
Glad it was helpful!
Sir ,could u please upload a vedio on how to decide the tolerance values for a particular component,
I mean wheather there is any STANDARDS or simply we can give any kind of values
Oh only if it was that easy. Tolerancing is a vast topic and you need to understand WHAT is it that you are defining a tolerance for. A tolerance on a heart valve is different than a tolerance on a truck's bumper than a gear on a car's engine! Every component deals with a different range of tolerances. To understand it better, look for tolerancing and in general after that GD&T
Thank you for making a video explaining all the essentials of tNice tutorials software. You really helped understand the software more, thank you
You're very welcome!
Your are the best teacher 😘😘😘
Wow, thank you
@@with-Aryan 😘😘😘😘
Thanx a lot for sharing very usefull tips.Keep it up
Most welcome 😊
Thanks man. I like drawing videos!!
I can learn a lot from you, even things that don't directly relate to the tips.
Glad you like them!
THANK YOU SO SO MUCH SIR
Most welcome
You are great dear❤
Thank you so much 😀
Excellent for learners
glad you liked it
That helps a lot
Thank you for the feedback, helps me serve my community better.
Useful
Glad you think so!
Thank you
Welcome!
Very Usefull
Glad you think so!
Useful information sir
So nice of you
Don't feel good bro i was in the sa precision you was in
Thank you very much
You are welcome
very very benefit
glad to hear that
I have solid work 2010 app, need key for simulation of parts static nd dynamic
If you apply different configurations in length, is there a way to control the break lines position to always stay parallel in the drawing in the different configurations.
That's a good one!
Very useful lecture
How do you make the bounding boxes from weldments smaller on drawings?
In SolidWorks, bounding boxes are automatically generated to fit the exact size of the component, so you can't directly make them smaller. They're intended to provide the exact outer dimensions of a part or assembly. However, there are a few workarounds you could try if you're looking to reduce the appearance of the bounding box in your drawings:
Hide Bounding Box: If the bounding box is not necessary for your drawings, you can hide it. To do this, go to the FeatureManager design tree, find the bounding box under the solid bodies folder, right click on it and select "Hide."
Change View Scale: If the bounding box appears too large in relation to other components in the drawing, you can adjust the view scale to make everything appear smaller. This doesn't shrink the bounding box itself, but it does make everything in the view, including the bounding box, appear smaller.
Use Break View: If your weldment is long and thin causing the bounding box to be large in the drawing, you might want to use the "Break View" option. This allows you to remove sections of the part in the drawing view, effectively reducing the size of the bounding box as displayed.
@@with-Aryan thank you for your feedback. Very much appreciated
can you explain how to add dimensions like in the top left view with no arrow heads?
all you have to do is to go to the settings, and in the search bar there, type arrow, then it brings you to the page where you can change the dim types
@@with-Aryan I did a google search and found out about ordinate dimensioning. That is the dimensioning you have on the top left. That is what i am doing on a practice part i am drawing.
Hi Aryan the tips you provided is quite beneficial for me but can you elaborate your seventh point as if you want to gave dimensions to your whole drawing it could be messy so it's quite hectic for you to give dimensions one by one.is there any way to solve this
To do that you must add all the dimensions right from the beginning. I might make a video on that. Hard to explain on text
Thanks for the reply ☺️@@with-Aryan
Where I can find the drawing you use for demonstration? I would like to reply the steps you do on the video on the same drawings
Sadly the drawings are not publicly downloadable as of now. Thanks for reminding I'll try and get that done.
Thank You for Giving Value Sir Aryan! Just a question: How to Center Break Lines? Thank You! All the Best to your Channel!🤗🤗🤗
there is a feature called SPLIT entintiy and you can find it in your search bar top right corner
How can we edit thickness of lines For chamfer, fillet etc
It is not clear what you are asking me here
@@with-Aryan hello sir,
When we creat part we add chamfers for the sharp corners of the body and we import that part in drawing we get chamfer lines in the part which become bit messy and unclear to recognise original part body lines so my question is that how can we edit those chamfer lines in drawing.
Maybe little bit of nit picking regarding the first tip and specifically the last 3 options of tolerances - to my knowledge they are not only for pins - but for all ISO Limits and Fits. Very useful when defining fits for shafts and bores.
Thanks for the feedback
thx
You are welcome
Sir, how can i add auto balloon to individual assembly parts drawing & link the number to part same as assembly drawing as the bom table, part name etc linked , Hope you understand if not please let me know .
To do this i put number manually as text ,one by one for all parts
a bit tricky, I hope I don't forget this in January, but once I am back iN jan, I will make a video about this, a great idea. If you didn't see it on my channel, please remind me. I would explain it here if it could be explaianed through text
@@with-Aryan thanks Sir ,i like the way you explain with ease ,I'm daily Solidworks user improving my solidworks skills day by day . I have many Questions to ask you , hope i got answered 😊
Hello sir, I have a problem. Can we show the all configurations of the same part in BOM table? If it is possible how can we do that?
First, open the assembly file that contains the part with configurations.
Now, go to the "Insert" menu, navigate to "Tables" and select "Bill of Materials".
In the "Bill of Materials" property manager, you will see the option for "BOM Type". Here you can choose "Parts only" or "Indented" to display each configuration of a part as a separate item in the BOM.
After the table is inserted, right-click on the table and select "BOM table" to display the BOM property manager again.
In the "BOM Options" section, select the checkbox for "Display configurations of the same part as separate items".
Click "OK" to apply the changes.
@@with-Aryan Thank you sir ❤
hi, when I do a break view, the projected views do not follow, why🤔
plress Ctrl+Q
@@with-Aryan I mean that when I make a view and its projected view, and I go back to the first view to make a broken view, the projected view does not follow. thank you.
@@mustaphabass1910 I am sorry man I still don't get the question. You wanna send me a screenshot of the isssue? info@solidworkstutorials.net
You never have to put a dimension on a hidden line.
???
143 bro
Dont assign any dimensions to hidden lines, just never do that. Always cut the part or create break throughs etc
these tips are all great but very basic
I think you need to zoom in and out more often!
Thank you for the valuable feedback.
آقا آرین؛چرا دوره به زبان فارسی تدریس نمی کنید؟ کلی طرفدار پیدا می کنید؟ می خواهی کمکتون کنم؟❤
salam, chon Irania hamishe talabkaran, ghor mizanan va donbale iraadan. che kar konam? dasto ta arenj bokoni to asal bezari dahanesho baz gaz migiran. Che komaki?
Well, calling these tips is a bit of a stretch. Maybe "tools you learned recently?"
Also, that hole callout is showing a wrong depth for your holes as the part is only 5mm thick where the holes are. Otherwise, good video.
سلام آریان❤؛ شما ایرانی هستید؟
are dawsh
Sorry Ryan, you can't put a dimension on a hidden line, it's against rules' drawings. It is a bad use and it's better not to show it to beginners.
having the option to do that, is a blessing that gives you more creativitly and ways out!
I actually sent this comment last year but wanted to reiterate. Your English is great but your content would be sooooo much more enjoyable if i didn’t have to keep rewinding because of your mis pronunciation of some words. Maybe you feel you have to speak rapidly. I promise, your “slow” is very fast to us and jumbled up. Please SLOW DOWN YOUR SPEECH. with all respect. Thank you. Chris
Thank you for the tips!
I would really like your videos more if you removed your face from the screen, I don’t think it is necessary, we need to hear you and see the whole screen as much as possible, nothing against you, I just find it very obstructing, besides, what is the purpose of your face there?
Thanks for the tip!
Thank you