2010
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- Part 1 Tubes and Pipes
- 1 Get Started with Tube & Pipe
- 2 Route Basics
- 3 Set Styles
- 4 Create Rigid Routes and Runs
- Workflow for Rigid Routes
- Create Auto Route Regions
- Manually Create Parametric Regions
- Automatically Dimension Route Sketches
- Create Segments With Precise Values
- Define Parallel and Perpendicular Segments
- Snap Route Points to Existing Geometry
- Place Constraints On Route Sketches
- Create Bends Between Existing Pipe Segments
- Create Pipe Routes With Custom Bends
- Create Bent Tube Routes
- Realign 3D Orthogonal Route Tool
- Control Dimension Visibility
- Populated Routes
- 5 Create and Edit Flexible Hose Routes
- 6 Edit Rigid Routes and Runs
- 7 Use Content Center Libraries
- 8 Author and Publish
- 9 Document Routes and Runs
- Part 2 Cable and Harness
- 10 Get Started with Cable and Harness
- 11 Work With Harness Assemblies
- 12 Use the Cable and Harness Library
- 13 Work with Wires and Cables
- 14 Work with Segments
- 15 Route Wires and Cables
- 16 Work with Splices
- 17 Work with Ribbon Cables
- 18 Generate Reports
- 19 Work With Nailboards and Drawings
- Part 3 IDF Translator
- Index
Inserts a table onto the nailboard drawing. Not avail-
able in nailboard sketch.
Create Table
Nailboard Browser
The Cable & Harness and Model browsers in the nailboard environment
contain the same items, except for the nailboard sketch, which exists only in
the model browser.
Create Nailboards
By default, when you create a nailboard drawing:
■ The nailboard view (or draft view) is created and placed in the nailboard
sketch.
■ The harness is placed in the center of the drawing.
■ The wires, cables, segments, and ribbon cables are drawn with their original
display color.
■ The title block and border are placed on the nailboard based on the selected
template.
■ Splices are represented with a unique symbol and color.
■ Wire and cable wire stubs are equally distributed (fanned out) in a clockwise
direction about the segment endpoint at a 90 degree angle.
■ No automatic scaling is done, which means that the harness objects are
placed on the drawing even if they exceed the border size. It causes the
nailboard to be a true one-to-one harness drawing.
■ Looms and labels are not shown.
NOTE If needed, use the standard Autodesk Inventor Edit command on the draft
view to scale the nailboard view.
The Enclosure Assembly contains three harness assemblies. You can create a
nailboard drawing for each.
344 | Chapter 19 Work With Nailboards and Drawings