General Procedure for Pipes and Tubes
This procedure describes ways to create a pipe
or tube
route sub-assembly. (For electrical cables, see General Procedure for Electrical
Cables.)
You set different routing options
and start the route differently depending on whether you want the fitting
from which you start the route to be a component of the main assembly
or the route sub-assembly.
A main assembly
can contain both pipe route sub-assemblies and tube route sub-assemblies,
but a single route sub-assembly cannot contain both pipes and tubes.
Preparations
Click Tools,
Add-Ins, and make sure SolidWorks
Routing is selected.
Before you begin the route sub-assembly,
have the following available:
Part
documents that you need for the pipe or tube assembly. Store these
part documents in the Routing
Library.
A main
assembly with the components to be connected (tanks, pumps, and
so on). Add any other components that are needed to specify the path of
the pipe or tube, such as supporting brackets and obstacles that must
be avoided. Position the fixed components using mates, dimensions, or
relations to a layout sketch, and save the assembly. (You can also create
a route sub-assembly in an empty main assembly.)
Select or clear the following
Routing
Option:
Procedure
The general procedure for creating a pipe or tube route:
In the main assembly, do one of the following:

|
The Design
Library opens to the appropriate folder when you click one of the
following:
|
The flange or fitting is inserted as a component
of the main assembly.
Right-click the connection point on the
flange or fitting where you want the route to start, and select Start Route. (To make the connection
points visible, click View Routing Points
(View toolbar), or View,
Routing Points.)

|
To start a route from a
component that does not have a connection point, click one of the following.
The PropertyManager appears so you can create a connection point.
|
Set options in the Route
Properties PropertyManager, then click
.
The following happens:
A 3D
sketch opens in a new route sub-assembly.
The new route subassembly is created, and
appears in the FeatureManager design tree as [Pipe<n>
or Tube<n>-<assembly_name>]
.
A stub of pipe or tube appears, extending
from the flange or fitting you just placed.
If you clear Save
route assembly externally in Routing Options, the
new route subassembly is created as a virtual component.
Sketch the path of the run using Line
(Sketch toolbar). For flexible tube routes, you can also
use Spline
(Sketch
toolbar). Press Tab to change
from one sketch plane to another. See Visualizing the 3D Space
for tips on working with 3D sketches.
You do not need mates or
sketch relations between the components of the route sub-assembly, because
the sizes and positions are driven by the 3D sketch. Each component in
the route sub-assembly is parametrically related to the 3D sketch. If
you change the sketch in any way, the pipes, tubes, and fittings are updated
automatically. For information on mating end fittings, see Mating in Routing Sub-assemblies.
Add
fittings as needed.
Exit the sketch.
The following appear in the FeatureManager
design tree of the route sub-assembly:
Components
folder containing the flanges and fittings you placed
in the route. If any custom
elbow fittings are required, the sketch segments are highlighted,
and the dimensions are displayed for each individual case. You can select
an alternate fitting, create a custom fitting, or choose to form a bend
in the pipe or tube.
Route
Parts
folder containing the pipe or tube that was
created as a virtual component when you exited the sketch.
Click Edit
Route
(Piping toolbar) or Edit
Route
(Flexible Tubing toolbar) to edit an existing
route.