While in an assembly, you can create features that exist in the assembly only. You determine which parts you want the feature to affect by setting the scope. You can create a pattern of assembly features in the same manner as you create a pattern of features in a part.
Use an assembly feature if the feature is added after the components are actually
assembled and the feature affects more than one component. For example, use assembly
features when you need to represent material-removal operations that are done after the
components are assembled.
When you want to add a feature to a single component in an assembly, it is
better to create the feature in the part rather than the assembly. To do so, you can do
one of the following:
- Edit the part in context.
- Create the feature in the assembly and then propagate it to the
part by selecting Propagate to part in
the PropertyManager.
While it is not a requirement, it is good practice to fully define the positions of the components of the assembly, or fix their locations, before you add assembly features. This helps prevent unexpected results if the components are moved later.
Assembly Features
and Top-Down Design
Assembly features are not associated with top-down design. The geometry of the parts (as they exist in the part files and drawings) has not been defined by geometry in the assembly (using a layout sketch, other parts, etc.). No external references have been created.
For example, holes in assembly components such as bearings, gears, and components with bolt holes are manufactured in the parts before assembly. For these cases, create the holes in the part documents. If you then want to define the location of those holes based on assembly geometry, for example using a layout sketch or the geometry of a different part, that is top-down design.