Chapter 15. Component Patterns

IN THIS CHAPTER

  • Local component patterns

  • Derived component patterns

  • Other pattern options

  • Tutorial: Creating component patterns

In SolidWorks assemblies, the word component can refer to either parts or subassemblies at the top level of an assembly. Component patterns can therefore be patterns of parts, subassemblies, or combinations of parts and subassemblies.

Note

For best pattern performance, you should use subassemblies as the patterned unit as much as is practical. Multiple patterns of individual components are not as efficient as a single pattern of multiple components. A single pattern of a single component, where the single component is itself a subassembly, is the best choice, if available.

Another performance issue is the fact that component patterns require external references (for the direction or center of the pattern). These external references have the potential to increase rebuild times if you do not choose them carefully.

Although you can experience possible performance problems with patterns, they can also significantly decrease the number of mates in an assembly, which always improves performance.

Component patterns come in two varieties: local patterns, which include linear and circular patterns, and derived patterns, which are driven from a feature pattern in a part. The local patterns are obviously somewhat limited, but because derived patterns follow patterned features, they can also be driven by sketch-driven patterns. Curve-driven and ...

Get SolidWorks® 2007 Bible now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.