Tuesday, June 30, 2009

A Positive Negative?

Negative Dimensions


Did you know that it is now possible to use negative dimensions in a sketch?  If you want to move a feature from one side to the other, you no longer have to delete the dimension, just move the feature to the other side and add the dimension back in.


Negative dims 1



Double click the dimension of the feature you want to move.


Negative dims 2





Type in the negative value of the dimension and watch the feature flip to the opposite side.  Also, the dimension will be displayed correctly and not with a minus sign in front of it.  This was a great little enhancement in 2009 that makes our lives a little easier.


 Negative dims 3




Monday, June 29, 2009

Flow Simulation to meet your goals!



Computational
Fluid Dynamics (CFD) has helped develop some of the latest aircrafts, help us
work more efficiently by maintaining our environment at a specific temperature,
or help chill beer for superbowl !!!



Floworks
takes a goal based approach to help us make these complex calculations.
Floworks initially considers any steady state flow problem as a time-dependent
problem. The solver module iterates on an internally determined time step to
seek a steady state flow field. Floworks has an algorithm to stop these
calculations once convergence has been achieved.  It is better a user uses his own criteria to
determine where the solution should be stopped. 
User specifies Goals as physical parameters of interest, so their convergence
can be considered as obtaining a steady state solution from engineering
viewpoint.



Specifying
Goals not only prevents possible errors in calculated values of these
parameters, but in most cases allows user to shorten the total solution time.
Users can monitor Goal convergence behavior during calculations. They can then
decide to stop the solver if solution is diverging or if necessary goals have
been achieved. Goal progress bar is a qualitative and quantitative
characteristic of the goal convergence process. For each goal user can choose
to use the goal for convergence control or not. Goals that are not used
convergence control will not influence finishing the calculation. 

1



Users can
specify the following types of Goals



Global Goal is a parameter calculated within the
entire computational domain.



Point Goal is a parameter calculated at a user
specified point.



Surface Goal is a parameter calculated on a user
specified face of the model.



Volume Goal is a parameter calculated within a
user specified space inside computational domain, either in fluid or solid.



Equation Goal is a mathematical function defined
using specified goals (either Global, Point, Surface, Volume) to monitor key
parameters that Floworks does not calculate by default. They play an important
role in the overall calculation as values important to the engineer. Eg.
Efficiency of fan, co-efficient of drag / lift, Pressure gradients at a
location.



It is
recommended to specify appropriate goal with the specified condition. Eg: If
user specify a pressure opening it makes sense to define a mass flow rate
surface goal at this opening. Floworks allows you to associate a type of
condition (boundary condition, fan, heat source or radiative surface) with
goals, which will be automatically created with the condition if the “create
associated goals” check box is selected in the conditions dialog box.

Rajat Trehan

Product Manager - Design Validation

Computer Aided Technology Inc.



Wednesday, June 24, 2009

SolidNetwork Licensing (SNL) Activation Update and FAQ’s

SolidWorks recently announced that the pilot program of SolidNetwork Licensing (SNL) Activation has been very successful. We here at CATI have had no reported problems after putting over 20 of our SNL customers in the SNL Activation pilot program.


Because of this success SolidNetwork License (SNL) server activation will be implemented as the standard licensing methodology for commercial network licenses with the SolidWorks 2010 release.  Also all new SNL orders will be licensed utilizing Activation starting on July 20, 2009. Please note: SolidWorks will stop shipping dongles for new SNL orders starting on July 20, 2009


If you are unfamiliar with what SNL Activation is you can look at it as a natural extension of Standalone License Activation that has been in place since the release of SolidWorks 2007. SNL Activation will completely eliminate the need for USB dongles, which will greatly streamline the installation process, shorten the delivery cycle, and reduce the technical issues caused by the dongle licensing.


So rather than plugging in a physical dongle and importing a license file matching the dongle, a CAD administrator will simply launch the SNL Administrator on the license server, enter the serial number, and press an ‘Activate Now’ button. Once all of the business rules pass, the customer’s SolidWorks assets will be loaded to the SNL Manager for sharing with the client computers within the company.


You may find more details on SolidNetwork Licensing (SNL) Activation from the attached FAQs or from CATI’s previous Blog postings.


http://blog.cati.com/2009/04/coming-soon-solidnetwork-licensing-with-no-dongle-no-file-no-fuss.html


http://blog.cati.com/2009/05/snl-activation-error-invalid-solidnetwork-license-serial-number-29.html



Download SolidNetwork Licensing Activation FAQs



---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Josh Altergott


CATI Support Team Leader





Tuesday, June 23, 2009

FYI - Want to know what that Windows Installer error code means?



Doing some digging I ran across
this cross reference list in the Installation FAQs along with some other useful
information that you might have wondered about in the installation process. It
is often heard on the support lines that there isn't enough information about
SolidWorks installs out there. Mostly I think it is overlooked, (I am at fault
as well) so I have put the list here for a sneak peek at some of the good info
out there. To see the full list click on this link:



https://www.solidworks.com/sw/support/FAQ-installation.html



Question:
What are the common SolidWorks related WI (Windows Installer) error codes?



Answer: The following are common SolidWorks WI (Windows Installer error
codes). The KB (Knowledge Base) links require a log in to the SolidWorks
Customer Portal and Subscription Service membership.





























































































































WI Error Code



KB
(Knowledge Base) Solution



1303



S-07981



1304



S-01648



1305



S-03380



1311



S-00584



1315



S-02808



1324



S-07596



1327



S-019667



1335



S-02595



1374



S-05098



1402



S-00385



1402



S-04760



1402



S-01664



1406



S-03256



1406



S-04760



1602



S-05216



1603



S-014608



1606



S-03797



1633



S-016790



1642



S-01631



1720



S-04978



1722



S-021528



1722



S-010746



1722



S-03048



1904



S-02148



1904



S-01546



1913



S-00583



1920



S-03123



1923



S-00303



1926



S-017440




 



Don’t forget to join the BETA Program!!! You can’t complain about the
release if you don’t!!!



John Van Engen



CATI Applications Engineer





Monday, June 22, 2009

SolidWorks 2010 Beta is now available for Download

SolidWorks Beta 2010 logo SolidWorks 2010 Beta is available for download on the SolidWorks customer portal. If you are  interested in participating in the beta program, have at it, but wait until my download finishes first ...

Information is available at the Beta Home at: http://www.solidworks.com/sw/support/subscription/betaprograms.htm

You will find the download files at:
http://customerportal.solidworks.com

Go to the download section. The version defaults to 2009, but you can use the pull down to select 2010.

If you are interested in finding out more about 2010 as the information becomes available, watch this blog, or sign up for our mail list in the right margin.



Thursday, June 18, 2009

ARE YOU USING THE RECOMMENDED VIDEO DRIVER?

It's very important to use the recommended/certified video driver for SolidWorks.


FIRST: What do you have?
1. Start, All Programs, Accessories, System Tools, System Information.
2. Check and Note:
---- System Summary:
---- ---- A. OS Name
---- ---- B. Version
---- ---- C. System Manufacturer
---- ---- D. System Model
---- ---- E. Processor (how many and speed. IE. 2 @ ~2330Mhz)
---- ---- F. Total Physical Memory
---- Components, Display
---- ---- A. Name
---- ---- B. Adapter Ram
---- ---- C. Driver Version (IE. 6.14.11.7575)



SECOND: What does SolidWorks Recommend?
1. www.solidworks.com
2. System/Graphics Card Requirements Link
3. System/Graphics Card Requirements Window
---- 1. Certified - leave it selected.
---- 2. System Vendor - VERY IMPORTANT!
How did the card get here? With the PC or separate? There are some differences between NVIDIA from Dell version from somewhere else.
---- 3. SolidWorks Version
---- 4. Operating System
---- 5. Card or Vendor
4. Pick the Show button
5. What Driver version do they list? Are there any notes, what do they say?
Note: Newer version drivers are not guaranteed to work better, and sometimes don't!



THIRD: Get that certified driver.
1. From the Recommended list, select the Blue text for the driver version to download the driver.



FOURTH: How to install that certified driver.
Per SolidWorks
Solution Id: S-033561
Question: When upgrading video card drivers, what is SolidWorks’ recommended process?
Answer: In several cases installation of video card drivers by update rather than as a fresh installation have been found to generate a variety of problems from SolidWorks not starting to black screens and intermittent abnormal terminations.  When installing video card drivers we recommend:


First uninstall the video card driver and revert back to the default Windows VGA / SVGA driver.  After the triggered reboot, reinstall the tested video card drivers.


1. Right click on your My Computer, Properties, Hardware, device manager, display adapters.
2. Then right click the video card, choose uninstall.


This will force you to reboot, then upon restarting disable anti-virus and install the new driver from the downloaded folder. On occasion this will state that it can't find any hardware that matches your driver. If this occurs. Right click on your My Computer, Properties, Hardware, device manager, display adapters. Then right click the video card, choose update driver and browse to the proper location of the new driver.



STILL HAVING PROBLEMS?: It's time to capture the issue with SolidWorksRx


START->All Programs->SolidWorks->SolidWorks 2009 SPx.x->SolidWorks Tools->SolidWorksRx
---Note: Shut SolidWorks down before starting SolidWorksRx---


1. Select Problem Capture
2. a. Describe Problem - Complete this the best you can.
3. b. Re-Create the Problem - Pick "Begin Recording".
4. Recreate Problem Window - Select Re-create the problem in SolidWorks, Start new session, Record with video.
------You can leave the Options button alone.
5. Pick Ok.
SolidWorks will launch, do what you would to make the problem show up or crash etc.
After a crash you'll be returned to SolidWorksRx.
If there isn't a crash and you've recreated the issue, just close out of SolidWorks.
Again you'll be back to the SolidWorksRx window.
6. Package - Please select Add Files under Related SolidWorks File.
7. Package Files.
The filename will be long, it starts with your SolidWorks serial number then the date. {SN}_{Date time group}.  It will be located in My Documents\SW Log files.  Locate the file and send that to us.


If the zip file is less than 5MB's e-mailing it to CATI should be fine.
If it's bigger than 5MB we should have you FTP the file to us.


This Rx zip file will give us a great deal of information to go on as we troubleshoot the issue further for you.


Thank You,
CATI Technical Support
888-285-2284



Northern Indiana SolidWorks User Group


Northern Indiana SolidWorks User Group


Do you live in a 260, 574, 219, 269 area code and want to learn more about SolidWorks?  Join us at the Northern Indiana SolidWorks User Group meeting where you will meet many of other excited SolidWorks users and learn a wide variety of information about SolidWorks. 


http://niswug.org


Date: June 23, 2009


Time: 5:00pm to 8:00pm


Where: Lake Michigan College Room #109, 1905 Fountain Drive, Niles, Michigan


Agenda: “The Fast Five”




  1. Utilization of New 2009 Features



  2. Intro to DWGEditor for SolidWorks Users



  3. Smart Mates



  4. Tools for Top Down Assembly Design



  5. Basic Design Tables Usage



Food is provided


RSVP http://niswug.org/contact.html


Leslie Lougheed


Regional Technical Manager


Computer Aided Technology, Inc.



 



Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Static Weldment Analysis



Anyone who has come across the dilemma of sizing welds has
wondered if FEA can help? So why is that no software on the market claims to
have perfected this art so pertinent to manufacturing industry.



 



FEA with all its calculative functionalities has certain
whims that need to be precisely catered to. FEA prefers all parts are gravity
cast blanks with polished surfaces free of any imperfections. Moreover, FEA
assumes all structures are heat treated to remove any residual stresses. The
manufacturing process in itself should be numerically controlled. All these
assumptions are obvious to produce consistent and predictable part to part
performance.



 



Weldments on the other hand never have any sort of
consistency. They vary due to change in temperature, chemistry of weld beads,
chemistry of base materials, weld geometry, residual stresses etc. Hence many
consider sizing welds an art and often end up with under-sized or over sized
welds. Anyone who has actually attempted in sizing welds using FEA has observed
several “hot spots” or stress singularities at the transition from weld bead to
geometry. One obvious question then arises are these stresses controlling? What
values have to be taken into consideration?

1



Throat Shear Method



 



The Throat shear method eliminates the need to estimate
initial weld size. This method accounts for allowable strength per unit length
in a weld based on weld type, and electrode used. These standard allowables are
based on physical tests and hence account for variability. Moreover obtaining
forces and moments from geometry are easy compared to stresses. Loads are less
sensitive to local geometry and mesh independent. So if you mesh a component
with three different mesh sizes, reaction loads from all three would be same,
unlike stresses, which would vary.



 



This methodology does not require you to model weld geometry
if using shell geometry. For solid models, there is some extra work required.
One can simply build mesh with welded parts intersecting.



1



In the areas you need to size welds, place split lines to
force evenly spaced vertices along the weld seam. Solve using draft quality
elements for boundary conditions applied. Extract forces at the vertices;
convert them into per unit loads. Compute weld size by dividing resultant load
by allowable strength. Allowable can be obtained using standards AWS D 1.1.
Force values are easily available if “Compute Free Body Forces” option is
checked under study properties. FBD forces are available for vertices, edges,
faces in Solid works 2009.

2

Rajat Trehan

Product Manager - Design Validation

Computer Aided Technology Inc.







VISTA -- What's in it for me?

Well I have made the move!  I'm now on VISTA, and boy is it pretty!!


But That's about it.  At least for me.  I have taken the time to play with the new environment for a few weeks now and have found that while being a bit easier on the eyes, it really doesn't do much else for me.


Background


I'm an engineer.  Performance and functionality excite me.  I'm not big on pretty pictures, video clips for my background, or security options that are more intrusive than helpful.  I don't however, want to give the impression that it's all bad.  Here are few neat little items that I like:


Snip-it --Many of us have been using the print screen method along with Paint to to take screen images and place them into presentations, reports and other documents but that is a fairly slow FreeForm process.  If you ever used Snag-It for taking screen shots you know what Snip-It can do for you.  While not as powerful as the Snag-It, it does everything that I generally need, it's built into the OS, and extremely easy to use.


This tool allows you to create screen shots and clips of Windows, or free form sections of your screen that are easily pasted into Word, Excel, or SolidWorks documents. 



Unfortunately, it turns out you cannot take shots of the snip-it window itself or of pop-up menus that disappear when your mouse is no longer hovering on them or when you click outside of them.  For most screen shots, however, it works perfectly and is extremely useful.



Monitor Resource Monitor -- This new addition to the OS is very useful.  I have been wondering why every time I boot my laptop I can hear my disk getting crushed with activity.  That does not help my performance at all and I could not find what was causing it through the task manager.  Until I found the resource monitor in the Performance tab of the task manager.  The tool let me see more detail about what's going on on the machine.  Utilization of Disk, CPU, RAM, Network are all charted here, but more importantly, they each display details of what files, processes, programs, etc... are causing the resource utilization.  In my case, the majority of my disk activity was caused by the Windows Search tool.



Svchost Go to Service(s) -- In previous versions of Windows what processes were really doing was generally a mystery.


Now with VISTA we get the option to right click a process and select go to Service(s).  This takes us to the services tab and highlights all the services that a process is running.  This has been particularly enlightening in regards to the svchost.exe processes running on my machine with no known reason.  Turns out there is a reason.  For more information on this feature read this article.


The Windows explorer has added some helpful functionality as well.  We now have the ability to create favorites directly in the left panel of the Explorer.Explorer



To make a favorite available just drag and drop the actual folder into the favorites panel.  This has been a great time saver for me because the 8 or 9 folders that I use most are buried pretty deep in the folder structure.  Now they are constantly at my fingertips.


Another aspect of the explorer that is useful as well is the address bar defaults to a horizontal list of folders that represent the path to the folder you are in.  Now I can skip back 2 or 3 folders in the list just by selecting the folder name I want rather than hitting the parent folder button 2 or 3 times.  Windows Vista also takes longer to log in than XP does so this give me the opportunity to go get another Mountain Dew and "Network" with my coworkers which I consider productive.  You never know what you'll learn when talking to those guys.


I know the list doesn't seem too long and it's not.  But this is what I have found so far.  There's not a lot of reasons in my opinion to jump off the cliff and dive into Vista.  However, there are not a lot of reasons to run screaming through the hills from it either.  I have not had any real trouble with the OS.  Stability seems to be fine, and speed is passable for what I do.  Remember though that SolidWorks takes a lot of resources and so does Vista.  If you don't have enough to go around (ie. RAM, Processor, Hard Drive space, Video RAM and Processor, etc..) they will battle it out and cost you time.


Adrian Fanjoy


Technical Service Manager


CATI



Monday, June 15, 2009

Knurl 2D Style!!

We had a couple of calls today regarding the addition of an area/hatch pattern on a cylinder in a drawing.Should be simple enough right? NOT!! You get this message instead!


1a 



So a customer came up with a work around until we can get this sorted out. Here are the steps:


This is where we want the knurl to go.


1 


Create a new layer called Knurl and draw a square where the knurled area is to be.


2  3


Hide the solid body leaving the square just created. You can apply an area/hatch to this boundary.


4 


5


End result.............Looks like this.


6 


A workaround to get you through without modeling knurls. There is another option here. You could also use a split line feature which would divide the cylinder into 2 faces. This would produce similar results.



Todd Werginz


Technical Analyst


CATI







Wednesday, June 10, 2009

SolidWorks 2010 Beta Site is Live

SolidWorks 2010 Beta Program The Beta site for 2010 went live on SolidWorks website today. If you are a subscription customer and interested in participating, go to the beta page and sign up.

Participating can take a lot of time, but if you are one of those people who wants to see the latest SolidWorks has to offer, and contribute to making 2010 the best SolidWorks ever, sign up now.



Monday, June 8, 2009

Large Iges Import = Some components suppressed, why?

This may not have been desired, to have some components suppressed. This is a performance thing and in this case it may not have really helped. Manually unsuppressing each item is tedious. You could shift or ctrl select the multiple items in the Feature Manager Tree and unsuppress/set to resolved.


Or, better yet, get it right the first time.


Tools, Options, System Options, Assemblies.


Turn on Use Large Assembly Mode and set the value for components higher, like 5,000 instead of 500. Then re-open/re-import the Large Iges file. More items should come in resolved.


Note: You may want to set this back the way it was after. Remember it's a performance thing, but in this case it may have just gotten in the way.


Jim Krivoshein, CSWP


Technical Analyst


Computer Aided Technology, Inc.



Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Do you want to show this already opened document error

I just wanted to throw a quick blog out there for our customers that are using routing. (This issue can happen more than with just routing, but this is where I typically see it most.)  I tend to switch my routing databases and library components around quite frequently, and every once in awhile I will run across an error that states “a document named ’fitting name’ is already opened.  Do you want to show those already opened document?”


There is a perfectly logical explanation for the error.  The error typically comes up when a document with the same name as a document open in the assembly is opened from a different folder.  The fix is quite simple; consolidate your library into one folder or ensure that all of your components are opening from the design library folder and the error should go away.


Hopefully this will help!


 


Keith Schaefer



Monday, June 1, 2009

I’VE INSTALLED SOLIDWORKS, BUT WHEN I TRY TO RUN IT, ALL I GET IS AN EXCLAMATION POINT FOR AN ERROR!

Now, error messages have never been known for being very specific, but just an exclamation point? What the heck!


 


So where do you go for something like this? You could call your reseller, and tell them what? I installed SolidWorks and all it does is give me an exclamation point. What would they say to that? You’re kidding? Uninstall it and reinstall it? Well hold on let’s not get that serious just yet. Searching the SolidWorks Knowledge Base is an option. It doesn’t always find something, but if you try to think a bit like a thesaurus and try a couple of different methods it can often yield some clues. Searching on the “!” didn’t find anything, but searching on “exclamation” found a few hits. Check out this solution it found:


 


Solution ID: S-035897


Question:


After installing SolidWorks from an administrative image, I get an error message without any text (empty box) with an exclamation mark. What could cause this problem?


Answer:


This problem has been identified to be related to wrong properties to a registry key.
The key is: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\SolidWorks\Security
The properties of the key is probably currently "Special permission" and should be set to "Full control" for SolidWorks Simulation to work correctly.


 


Now messing with the registry can cause some significant repercussions, even when it doesn’t seem like it should. So you shouldn’t go alone on something like this, get your IT person or better yet, get your reseller involved. This solution provided the right fix. By simply trying to access the key we found we couldn’t. By changing the permissions on this key the install would run. The registry hang up caused the Simulation and Motion products to not install, so a repair of the installation was required to complete the install of those products.


Whew!


 


Jim Krivoshein, CSWP


Technical Analyst


Computer Aided Technology, Inc.



Wrap It Up!

Want to have extruded text follow a curved surface?  The Wrap command will do this for you.  It is found Insert>Features>Wrap.



  1. Make a 2D Sketch of the text you would like to have extruded.  Use the Text tool (Tools>Sketch Entities>Text) and construction geometry to define the sketch.


Wrap02



  1. Exit the sketch.  The Wrap command is not available when you are in a 2D Sketch.
  2. Go to Insert>Features>Wrap.
  3. Select the sketch as the source sketch if it is not already selected.
  4. Choose the Emboss option to add material, the Deboss option to cut in material, or the Scribe option to split the face with the text.
  5. Select the face for the text.
  6. Enter in an Emboss/Deboss depth.  With the Scribe option, there will be no depth.
  7. If needed, change the Pull direction with a plane or edge selection.
    Wrap03

  8. Click the green check.


You will now have curved text that follows the surface your surface.


Wrap04



Design Better!


Leslie Lougheed
Regional Technical Manager