Difference between revisions of "Cutout Library"

From Protocase Designer Documentation
Jump to: navigation, search
(Creating a New Item in Your Personal Library)
(Creating a New Item in Your Personal Library)
Line 33: Line 33:
 
#If you want to change the default origin (shown as a red dot), in '''Origin Placement''' click the dot that you want to be the origin. (It will turn red.)
 
#If you want to change the default origin (shown as a red dot), in '''Origin Placement''' click the dot that you want to be the origin. (It will turn red.)
 
#;'''Notes'''  
 
#;'''Notes'''  
#*The origin is the origin of the canvas, not just of the cutout on it.  
+
#*The origin is the origin of the canvas, not just of the cutout on it.
 
#*Using the center as the origin makes it easiest to place objects; you will not need to use the grid because you can center objects on the origin.  
 
#*Using the center as the origin makes it easiest to place objects; you will not need to use the grid because you can center objects on the origin.  
 
#Enter the '''Height''' and '''Width''' of the cutout canvas. This is the area shown in green, on which the cutout is drawn. '''Tip''': Make each cutout canvas as large as the item that goes into the cutout, not just the hole it goes into, so that you can add an '''[[Face_Editor#Using_the_Exclusion_drawing_mode | exclusion zone]]''' that fills the canvas around the cutout to prevent objects from being placed too closely.  
 
#Enter the '''Height''' and '''Width''' of the cutout canvas. This is the area shown in green, on which the cutout is drawn. '''Tip''': Make each cutout canvas as large as the item that goes into the cutout, not just the hole it goes into, so that you can add an '''[[Face_Editor#Using_the_Exclusion_drawing_mode | exclusion zone]]''' that fills the canvas around the cutout to prevent objects from being placed too closely.  
#Click '''OK'''.
+
#When you click OK, you will be taken to your object editor, where you will create the object that you need using all of the same tools in the Face Editor.
#Create the cutout in the editor that opens. When done, click '''Accept and Close'''. The cutout is added to the '''personal library''' section of the Library manager.<br><br>
+
#[[File:Create new object in editor.PNG|400px]]
 +
#When done, click '''Save'''. The custom object you've created is now is added to the '''personal library''' section of the Library Manager.<br><br>
  
 
==Saving a cutout to the Library from the Face Editor==
 
==Saving a cutout to the Library from the Face Editor==

Revision as of 13:20, 5 May 2023

Library Manager Overview

To get you started quickly in customizing your enclosure design, Protocase Designer includes a built-in library of common cutouts, graphics, fasteners, hardware and more. You can also use the library to create, edit, delete, organize, and place single or groups of cutouts on your enclosure. All cutouts are in the PDC (Protocase Designer Cutout) format.

Protocase also offers a separate, online cutout library, which provides cutouts in DXF (Drawing Interchange Format, or Drawing Exchange Format) and SLDPRT (SolidWorks Part File) formats. You can download any cutout for free, and contribute custom cutouts of your own. You can also update the local Designer library from the online one. For more information on using the online library or to search it, see [Protocase online Cutout Library].

The rest of this page contains information on the Designer cutout library, including how to contribute a design (that you have added to your Designer library) to the online library.

Opening the Library Manager

In both the 3D Viewer and the Face Editor, choose the type of object from the Library drop-down menu, then click Go.

Opening the Library Manager.png

The Library Manager is organized into different categories of items, which are listed on each tab: Cutouts, Graphics, Hardware, Fasteners, Components and Personal. The cutouts you create (or modify) and save are automatically added to the personal library. This prevents the main library of stock cutouts from being changed, and also helps you find your own cutouts more easily. You can add, delete, or edit any item or category in the personal library, but not in the main library.

Opening the Library Manager.png

Click any tab to view its items, which are sorted into sub-folders; Double click the folder to view the items stored within it; click any item to view it along with details such as its name, manufacturer, and part number.

600px

You can also use the search tab to find a specific item you need for your design. Note: You must pre-select the tab that you wish to search within. The search field does not search across all tabs. Library manager search field.png

Managing Library Manager Items


When opening the Library Manager from the 3D View, you can create a copy for edit. This edited copy of the cutout will be saved in your Personal Library.
Managing cutout library items 3D viewer.png

When using the Library Manager from the Face Editor (Cutout Library and Fasteners > Cutout Library), you can also:

  • Place Item: Place the item onto the current face.

Managing cutout library items face editor.png
When you click this button the Face Editor opens, and the cursor changes to an image of object footprint. Click in each location on the face where you wish to place the object; when done, press <Esc>.

Place item from library manager.png

Creating a New Item in Your Personal Library

  1. In the Library Manager window, select the Personal tab and click the New Item button.
    Create new item from library manager.png
  2. The New Library Item dialog opens.
  3. New library item.png
  4. In Name, enter a unique identifying name for the cutout.
  5. If you want to change the default origin (shown as a red dot), in Origin Placement click the dot that you want to be the origin. (It will turn red.)
    Notes
    • The origin is the origin of the canvas, not just of the cutout on it.
    • Using the center as the origin makes it easiest to place objects; you will not need to use the grid because you can center objects on the origin.
  6. Enter the Height and Width of the cutout canvas. This is the area shown in green, on which the cutout is drawn. Tip: Make each cutout canvas as large as the item that goes into the cutout, not just the hole it goes into, so that you can add an exclusion zone that fills the canvas around the cutout to prevent objects from being placed too closely.
  7. When you click OK, you will be taken to your object editor, where you will create the object that you need using all of the same tools in the Face Editor.
  8. Create new object in editor.PNG
  9. When done, click Save. The custom object you've created is now is added to the personal library section of the Library Manager.

Saving a cutout to the Library from the Face Editor

When you create a cutout of your own on a face, you can save it to the Cutout Library.

  1. After creating the cutout in the Face Editor, click the Edit button and select the cutout.
  2. If the cutout consists of more than one object, click the Group button in the Properties panel. Note When grouped, the origin for the group is the origin of the first object created in the group.
  3. Click the Add to Library button. The Edit Properties dialog opens.
    Edit properties dialog NEW.png
  4. Enter a new Name for the cutout. You can optionally add x and y offsets, Width, Height, Manufacturer, Part Number, and Description.
  5. Click OK. The cutout is added to the personal library section of the Cutout Library.

See Also:

Changing the origin of an existing cutout

The best use of this procedure is after you group and/or merge items in the Face Editor and save them as a cutout, because Designer does not have control over where the origin ends up, and you might want to change the origin to make it more useful for placement.

  1. From the 3D View window, choose Cutout Library Manager > Open Cutout Manager, browse to find the item, and click to select it.
  2. Click the Edit Item button. The cutout is displayed in the Cutout Editor, with the origin shown as a blue circle with two axis arrows. In this example, we will move the origin in the Large Rackmount Handle from the center to the lower left.
    Change origin 1.png
  3. Click the origin and hold down the mouse button while you drag the cutout (and canvas) so that the origin is in the desired location. If you need to place the origin at an exact position, use the coordinates in the lower left corner of the screen as your reference while you drag the cutout. (The cutout moves around the origin, so you might need to pan and/or zoom to keep the image squarely in view.)
    Change origin 2.png
  4. Click the ‘’’Accept and Close’’’ button.

Note In the above example, the origin has been placed in the lower left corner of the canvas, not of the slot cutout itself. Be sure to account for this, if necessary, when placing it on a face. Here is another example of the difference:

Cutout moved so that origin is in center of canvas:
Change origin 3.png
Cutout moved so that origin is in center of cutout:
Change origin 4.png

Contributing a cutout design to the online library

Once you have added a cutout to your Designer library, you can contribute it to the online library as follows:

  1. Open the Cutout Library.
  2. From the personal library section, select the cutout you want to contribute.
  3. Click the Upload to Online Library Upload to Online Library button.png button. The Review Upload dialog opens:
    Review upload dialog.png
  4. Enter the:
    • Category (for example, PEMs, Connectors, Decorative, Fans, etc.)
    • Sub Category (for example, Screws, Nuts, Standoffs, and Studs are all subcategories of PEMs)
    • Link to Part on Manufacturer's Website
    • If you also want to contribute a Solidworks file for the same item, click the Browse button and select the file to contribute.
  5. Click the Submit button.

Importing DXF files

Two-dimensional DXF files for cutouts, graphics, or groups of each can be imported into Protocase Designer directly into your design, or into your Cutout Library.

To import a dxf it must be an ascii dxf, not a binary dxf. This is usually an option in the dxf export for most software. It has been tested with autodesk version R12 and R14, as well as SolidWorks 2018.

Note that cutouts must be closed loops of continuous lines, and that splines are not supported. (The Protocase laser cuts only lines and circular arcs.) Since our implementation cannot cover every version of every software tool that makes DXF files, if you have trouble importing a DXF file, please send it to designer@protocase.com and state that you cannot import it into Protocase Designer, and if possible let us know what software package it was created in.

How DXF Line Types are converted to Protocase Designer

Some DXF line types, upon import, are converted to Construct or Exclusion zones.

The Exclusion object type is used to mark areas where other objects (except text and graphics) cannot be added. Constructs, on the other hand, add a design or other reference (including a note) to any part of the design. Construct objects never affect production, or impede where objects can be placed.

DXF Protocase Designer
Continuous Construct
By Layer Construct
Center Exclusion
CenterX2 Exclusion
Hidden Construct
Dotted Profile (a boundary that provides you with a point of reference, like a construct does)

Read more about constructs here and exclusions here.


To import a DXF file into a design

  1. If the DXF is that of a circuit board, first remove everything from the DXF file except the mounting holes and the board outline, and change the board outline to the Hidden or CenterX2 line type. (As noted above, in Designer the Hidden line type becomes a Construct, and the CENTERX2 line type becomes an Exclusion.)
  2. Load the assembly and select the face you want to add the cutout to.
  3. In the Face Editor, choose Cutout Library and Fasteners > Place Object From File.
  4. Browse to the DXF file, select it and click Open.
    If units of measure are not found in the file, you are prompted to select the unit (Inches, MM, or CM).
    The New Library Item dialog opens, with the Keep Default Origin radio button selected.
  5. To accept the default, click OK. To change the default, select the Assign New Origin radio button, click the dot that you want to be the new origin, then click OK.
    The Face Editor opens with the cutout displayed at the cursor location. Move it to the desired location on the face, and click to place it on the face with its origin at that point.


To import a DXF file into your Cutout Library

  1. If the DXF is that of a circuit board, first remove everything from the DXF file except the mounting holes and the board outline, and change the board outline to the Hidden or CenterX2 line type. (As noted above, in Designer the Hidden line type becomes a Construct, and the CenterX2 line type becomes an Exclusion.)
  2. From the 3D View, choose Cutout Library Manager > Open Cutout Manager, or, from the Face Editor, choose Cutout Library and Fasteners > Cutout Library Manager.
  3. Click Load Item from File.
  4. Browse to the DXF file, select it and click Open.
    The New Library Item dialog opens, with the Keep Default Origin radio button selected.
  5. To accept the default, click OK. To change the default, select the Assign New Origin radio button, click the dot that you want to be the new origin, then click OK.
    The cutout is added to your library and is displayed at the bottom of the cutout list.