Measure Center of Mass of step file
Posted: 24 Jun 2016, 00:06
Greetings,
I found ABViewer because I needed to find the volume and center of mass (CoM) of a complex .stp file. The good news is that I have been able to find the information for the individual parts of the file, but it does not calculate it for the entire file as the following help file says it should:
http://cadsofttools.com/help/en/measuri ... ls.htm#vol
I checked all the parts, but only the properties of the most recently clicked-on (not necessarily checked) part are shown. With 200 parts, putting them all in a spreadsheet would be pretty insane, hence why I thought ABViewer would be a good solution. Am I missing something? I just would like the volume and CoM of the entire assembly.
I have included three screen shots (in one Word file): the first shows what I want (the .stp file selected with a bunch of parts checked and no properties showing) and another that has a number of parts checked, but it's only showing the properties of the one part selected. The third is the description on CNET.
Thanks in advance!
I found ABViewer because I needed to find the volume and center of mass (CoM) of a complex .stp file. The good news is that I have been able to find the information for the individual parts of the file, but it does not calculate it for the entire file as the following help file says it should:
http://cadsofttools.com/help/en/measuri ... ls.htm#vol
I checked all the parts, but only the properties of the most recently clicked-on (not necessarily checked) part are shown. With 200 parts, putting them all in a spreadsheet would be pretty insane, hence why I thought ABViewer would be a good solution. Am I missing something? I just would like the volume and CoM of the entire assembly.
I have included three screen shots (in one Word file): the first shows what I want (the .stp file selected with a bunch of parts checked and no properties showing) and another that has a number of parts checked, but it's only showing the properties of the one part selected. The third is the description on CNET.
Thanks in advance!