Assign Operations to Different Processes
Depending on how you have customized routing, you might need to manually assign operations on specific GCDs to different processes.
For example, you may added a second instance of a “2Axis Lathe” process, so that roughing of curved wall GCDs can occur on the first lathe and finishing of the curved wall GCDs can occur on the second lathe.
By default, all operations are assigned to the first instance of a process, so you manually assign the finishing operations to the second lathe process.
Manually assigning GCD operations to another process
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In the Manufacturing Process pane, click on the + symbols to expand the process nodes of interest. For example, you may see a node named “2 Axis Lathe” and a second node named “2 Axis Lathe:2”.
- Each process node has sub-nodes representing the operations assigned to that process and the GCDs on which they are done. In this example, you would see that the first “2 Axis Lathe” node contains a Rough Turning node and a Finish Turning node, each with Curved Wall GCDs under them. The second lathe process “2 Axis Lathe:2” would not initially have any operations or GCDs under it, as all operations are by default performed on the first lathe.
- For each operation/GCD pair of interest, click on the GCD node and drag-and-drop it onto the new process node In this example, you would click on a curved wall GCD located under the Finish Turning node and drag it from the “2 Axis Lathe” node onto the “2 Axis Lathe:2”.
- You can multi-select GCDs or GCD/Operation pairs to drag by holding down the Ctrl-key. If you are unable to drop the operation/GCD pair on the process node of interest.
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The Manufacturing Process pane updates to reflect how GCDs/operations are now assigned. In this example, you see a Finish Turning node under the “2 Axis Lathe:2” process and a curved wall GCD under it indicating that curved wall is now being finished on the second lathe.
- Continue dragging-and-dropping until all operations/GCDs are assigned to the appropriate lathe processes.
- If you are unable to drop the operation/GCD pair on the process node of interest, you may also need to change or edit the Operation Sequence routing. Building on the earlier example, if you customize the process routing to insert a new 3 Axis Lathe process (instead of the second 2 Axis Lathe) following the original 2 Axis Lathe process, you drag curved wall operations to the 3 Axis Lathe.
- This happens because the operation sequence for the curved wall does not contain 3 Axis Lathe operations.
- To fix this, open the Operation Sequence Selection window for the GCD(s) of interest and select an operation sequence that includes the 3 Axis Lathe.
- In other examples, you may need to customize the Operation Sequence to include the processes that were added to the part routing. For more information on customizing operation sequences, see Create a Custom Operation Sequence: Highlighting associated GCDs.
The Highlight Associated GCDs command you to select a manufacturing step from the Routing Tree and highlight the GCDs associated with this step in the Component Viewer and in the Geometric Cost Drivers table.
In Direct Integration mode, if the component is opened in the active window in the CAD system, the associated GCDs are highlighted in the CAD model.
Highlighting associated GCDs
Right-click a step in the manufacturing process and select Highlight Associated GCDs.
Note: You can also highlight GCDs of a particular type directly from the Component Viewer. See the description of the Marquee Selection Tool in the Component Viewer.