Creo Parametric - Top Down Design (TDD) Overview

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  • Опубликовано: 20 авг 2024

Комментарии • 12

  • @matts9728
    @matts9728 5 лет назад +5

    Thanks so much for putting out all of this info out there, it's helped tremendously. I've been designing in the aerospace field as well, cheers!

  • @TheDarkJohns
    @TheDarkJohns 4 года назад +1

    Great! Finally found the good quality content I was looking for. Hope now I can begin to fully handle Creo the way I want to. Thank you!

  • @kalpitkatpara4363
    @kalpitkatpara4363 2 года назад

    As always amazing video, We are grateful to you for creating such quality content on youtube!

    • @CADPLMGuy
      @CADPLMGuy  2 года назад

      Thanks for watching!

  • @dan445678
    @dan445678 4 года назад

    I'm getting back up to speed on Creo and have found your videos to be the most comprehensive and fully explained. Thank you! I'm interested in your books, do you have one you would recommend for someone trying to get a good overview of the software's capabilities?

    • @CADPLMGuy
      @CADPLMGuy  3 года назад

      Daniel, thanks for watching my videos and I’m glad they are helping. Unfortunately, my books are on fairly narrow subjects within Creo. Most of the other books I’m aware of tend to be the introductory nature.

  • @rameshdharman9197
    @rameshdharman9197 4 года назад

    Is it possible to make parametrical surface master model? So that it can be easily modified later when ever change in overall dimensions of the product..

    • @CADPLMGuy
      @CADPLMGuy  4 года назад +1

      Yes

    • @rameshdharman9197
      @rameshdharman9197 4 года назад

      @@CADPLMGuy Have you made any video for that before ..

    • @CADPLMGuy
      @CADPLMGuy  4 года назад +2

      I've made videos on surface features like Boundary Blend which are certainly parametric. But this is a complex subject, more like a book than a video, and certainly depends a lot on the type of product being made. My last three jobs were in consumer electronics, drones, and rockets, and you could have different approaches depending on what you want to control, i.e., your Design Intent. Also the Master Model / Skeleton / OML / ID / whatever you want to call it typically consists of multiple surfaces usually merged together. The simplest answer is "Use datum planes or a bounding box surface for the overall dimensions, and have the curves and surfaces reference that bounding box parametrically." The next simplest-sounding answer is "plan your model so you have the dimensions that you want to control," but that's really the whole ballgame, isn't it? And I actually did write a whole book on this subject (Design Intent). Saying "plan your model correctly" is sort of like saying to be a master pianist, just play all the right notes in the right order at the right time. The devil is in the details.

    • @rameshdharman9197
      @rameshdharman9197 4 года назад

      Thanks for your reply,Dave..

  • @bharathhk960
    @bharathhk960 Год назад

    hi David, can i have this presentation please