Experts answer the top questions about SOLIDWORKS sheet metal and provide resources to help you master SOLIDWORKS sheet metal designs.
Experts answer the top questions about SOLIDWORKS 2D drawings and provide resources to help you improve your SOLIDWORKS drawing skill set.
Video: Watch this free master class to learn how to do a 3D sketch in SOLIDWORKS with Sketch Ink, watch the SOLIDWORKS tutorial now.
SOLIDWORKS World 2019 was a conference like no other.
Working with large assemblies in SOLIDWORKS can be very challenging — and even frustrating — if you’re not familiar with some basic large assembly performance improvement techniques.
If you’ve had access to a 3D printer for a while, you’ve likely tried plenty of projects like printing calibration cubes to attempt getting just the right amount of extrusion.
Taking a look at the use and setup of the seven mechanical mates in SOLIDWORKS Choosing which mates to use when building your assemblies in SOLIDWORKS depends on what you want to do with the assembly itself.
An introduction to SOLIDWORKS’ 7 advanced assembly mates and when to use them When you’re building a static assembly — or even one that just needs to look a certain way for renders or meetings — the standard mates in SOLIDWORKS (coincident, parallel, perpendicular, tangent, concentric, lock, distance, angle) will usually be enough.
If you’ve ever seen a model of a small electronic train chugging along a little metal track lined with cotton-ball bushes and a painted foam mountain, you’ve seen how important scale is.