Book Image

Learn SOLIDWORKS 2020

By : Tayseer Almattar
Book Image

Learn SOLIDWORKS 2020

By: Tayseer Almattar

Overview of this book

SOLIDWORKS is the leading choice for 3D engineering and product design applications across industries such as aviation, automobiles, and consumer product design. This book takes a practical approach to getting you up and running with SOLIDWORKS 2020. You'll start with the basics, exploring the software interface and working with drawing files. The book then guides you through topics such as sketching, building complex 3D models, generating dynamic and static assemblies, and generating 2D engineering drawings to equip you for mechanical design projects. You'll also do practical exercises to get hands-on with creating sketches, 3D part models, assemblies, and drawings. To reinforce your understanding of SOLIDWORKS, the book is supplemented by downloadable files that will help you follow up with the concepts and exercises found in the book. By the end of this book, you'll have gained the skills you need to create professional 3D mechanical models using SOLIDWORKS, and you'll be able to prepare effectively for the Certified SOLIDWORKS Associate (CSWA) and Certified SOLIDWORKS Professional (CSWP) exams.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)

Summary

In this chapter, we started working with assemblies. In SOLIDWORKS assemblies, we are able to put together more than one part to generate a more complex artifact. Most of the products we use in our everyday lives, such as phones, laptops, and cars, consist of multiple parts that have been put together; that is, they have been assembled. In this chapter, we learned about standard mates, which help us create links to different parts of the assembly. We learned what these mates do, how to apply them, and how to modify them. Then, we learned about materials and mass properties within the context of assemblies.

Now, we should be able to create more complex products that consist of more than one part. We should also be able to build simple static and dynamic interactions between those different parts. All of this brings us closer to designing more realistic products with SOLIDWORKS...