MJuric wrote: ↑Wed Jun 30, 2021 5:50 pm
The only way I see that working is in a big table with conditional formatting of some sort. Instead of tying the fixture to an assembly you could tie it the table. Change a dimension in any assembly or model and the table is updated and shows things that aren't going to work.
I think I understand what you're saying, that could work, but then the users involved need to agree on how to set up the table and understand how to use it. Granted it's just excel, but of the people that design fixtures in the tool room maybe 1/2 of them are fluent in excel, the other half will try to attach it in an email.
![facepalm <()>](./images/smilies/facepalm.gif)
We just use the graphical tool (CAD) to see the parts instead of a table linked all over the place.
The weld fixture (in our case) is built around what it makes (again in our case this is an assembly, but could be part file) but the fixture model is not
driven by the model of what it makes. Then as the fixture is used on more and more part numbers those models are added to the fixture model. This way they can be shown or hidden, colored, whatever. So instead of using another tool (a table) they can just use CAD and have a graphical view. We do a lot of edit in place, but again no driving down the tree. Yes this stinks when we have to move one screw because it requires the edit to be done in all the models affected; there's no move the screw in the assembly and the pc parts all update, we don't do that because then what about all the other places that use those parts? A part cannot serve two masters, it will either work for one and break the other or wreck one and work for the other.