Table of contents
No headers In this section, you create a mold design assembly and add the plastic part to mold.
- Click
and select > . - Browse to the Tutorial Files/Mold folder and set the project to Mold.ipj.
- In the dialog box, click
. - In the dialog box, scroll to the Inventor Mold libraries and ensure that the checkbox is enabled. If the metric library is not enabled, you cannot able to add the mold base later in the tutorial.
- Click on the dialog box.
- Click on the dialog box.
- Click Inventor
. - Select to open the dialog box and start a new mold assembly.
- From the tab of the dialog box, click , and then click on the dialog box.
- In the dialog box, click to accept the defaults. The Mold Design environment is now available.
TipDo not check the box titled Interactive Tutorials. It provides an alternate method to navigate to the tutorials.
NoteFor subsequent work, it is important to choose a descriptive name that easily identifies the mold file. For this tutorial, you use the supplied default. The
About this tutorial tutorial will further explain project files and file schemes.
- In the Mold Design browser, right-click the mold icon and choose Prompt for File Names in the context menu. You can control the names and locations of system generated files.
NoteThe enabled or disabled state of the file name setting is persistent between sessions.
- On the ribbon, click > >
. - In the dialog box, select the Mobile Top.ipt part file and click to add the plastic part to the mold assembly.
- Left-click in the graphics window to place the part with the default alignment option.
- Click OK to accept the default file names and location on the file naming dialog box.
The Inventor part file, which is now placed in the Mold Design environment, will be used to guide you through the process of mold base design.
User Inventor Mold Design to place multiple moldable parts in the mold assembly as a family of parts. Or, you can use patterning functionality in the mold layout to create rectangular, circular, or variable placement patterns.
For more information about these techniques, refer to the following tutorial: About this tutorial
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