

: Fasteners dropdown : Allows to insert industry standard screws, nuts and washers from the Fasteners Workbench library, and allows to attach them to Assembly4 datum objects, primarily coordinate systems (LCS). In this case, it is important to note that only LCS at the root of the linked part can be used. This target LCS can be either in the assembly itself (in the Model) or in a sister part already linked.

This attaches an LCS in the linked part to a target LCS in the assembly. : Place Link : this positions the child instance of a linked part in the current host assembly. If a name already attribuated is given again, FreeCAD will automatically give it a unique (and probably un-user-friendly) name. A part can be inserted (linked) many times, but each instance must have a unique name in the assembly tree. If there are multiple parts in a document, they can be selected individually. Only parts from documents already open in the session and saved to disk can be used. : Link to a Part : creates a FreeCAD App::Link to an App::Part. : New Part : creates FreeCAD App::Part in the current document and allows to give it a name. If you create such a PartDesign::Body with the PartDesign workbench, it will be placed at the root of the document, outside any App::Part. This Body can then be used with FreeCAD's PartDesign workbench. : New Body : creates FreeCAD PartDesign::Body in the selected App::Part. One document can only contain one Assembly4 Model. This can be used to design a stand-alone part or be the container for an assembly. : New Model : creates an Assembly4 Model, which is a FreeCAD App::Part called Model and with some extra additions. Menu These functions are also accessible from the Assembly menu: If a command is inactive (grayed out) it's because something is selected to which that function doesn't apply. ToolbarĬommands are activated with relevant selection. The Assembly menu contains tools to build the assembly, and the Constraints menu contains tools to place parts relative to each other. for Linux, FreeCAD version v0.20 : ~/.local/share/FreeCAD/Mod/Īssembly4 commands are accessible from the Assembly menu or the Assembly4 toolbar.for Linux, FreeCAD version v0.19 : ~/.FreeCAD/Mod.for MacOS: ~/Library/Preferences/FreeCAD/Mod/.for Windows: C:\Users\******\AppData\Roaming\FreeCAD\Mod.Then, remove any existing Assembly4 directory from FreeCAD's local workbench directory, and copy the folder FreeCAD_Assembly4-master into the directory containing all FreeCAD addon modules :
#FREECAD OFFSET ARCHIVE#
In this case, download the Github FreeCAD_Assembly4-master.zip archive from /Zolko-123/FreeCAD_Assembly4 to a temporary directory, and extract the Zip archive. This can be useful for testing local modifications to the workbench, or to remove an old stale version of the workbench.

#FREECAD OFFSET INSTALL#
It is also possible to install this workbench manually into FreeCAD's local workbench directory. Important Note: Assembly 4 is not compatible with Assembly2+ and Assembl圓. Assembly4 is not compatible with FreeCAD v0.18 and before. Important Note: Assembly 4 needs FreeCAD v0.19 or above. It is called Assembly4 in the Addon Repository. Installation Addon Manager (recommended)Īssembly 4 is available through the FreeCAD Addon Manager (menu Tools > Addon Manager). These instructions present the intended usage and workflow to assembly design using FreeCAD's Assembly4 workbench. FreeCAD Assembly 4 workbench user instructions
