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Pro/ENGINEER Wildfire 2.0 Tutorial & MultiMedia CD

Pro/ENGINEER Wildfire 2.0 Tutorial & MultiMedia CD

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Authors: Roger Toogood, Jack Zecher
Publisher: Schroff Development Corporation
Category: Book

List Price: $69.95
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Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 207641

Media: Paperback
Pages: 346
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9
Dimensions (in): 10.9 x 8.5 x 0.7

ISBN: 1585031860
Dewey Decimal Number: 620.1
EAN: 9781585031863
ASIN: 1585031860

Publication Date: July 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Good condition. No C D included. Minor wear and small crease on cover. Clean pages, tight binding. Fast processing & professional shipping.

Similar Items:

  • Pro/ENGINEER Tutorial Wildfire 2.0 Advanced
  • Principles of CAD/CAM/CAE
  • Pro/MECHANICA Tutorial Wildfire 2.0
  • The Mechanical Design Process
  • Pro/ENGINEER Wildfire 3.0 Tutorial and MultiMedia CD

Editorial Reviews:

Book Description
This tutorial was created to introduce new users to Pro/ENGINEER and has been updated for Wildfire 3.0. This release of Pro/ENGINEER continues the major revisions to the software started with the first Wildfire release, particularly in the user interface which continues to become more Windows -like and easier to use. The tutorial covers the major concepts and frequently used commands required to advance from a novice to an intermediate user level. Major topics include part and assembly creation, and creation of engineering drawings. The major functions that make Pro/E a parametric solid modeler are illustrated.

Although the commands are presented in a click-by-click manner, an effort has been made, in addition to showing/illustrating the command usage, to explain why certain commands are being used and the relation of feature selection and construction to the overall part design philosophy. Moreover, since error recovery is an important skill, considerable time is spent exploring the created models (in fact, intentionally inducing some errors), so that users will become comfortable with the "debugging" phase of model creation.

The lessons in this tutorial are meant to be covered sequentially. Discussion of commands is, for the most part, restricted to their use within the context of the lesson. For this reason, many options to commands are not dealt with in detail all in the same place in the text, as is done in the on-line reference material.

The multimedia CD-ROM produced by Jack Zecher at IUPU-Indianapolis is included with the goal of providing users with multi-modal learning tools and experiences. The CD should help significantly in getting "up the learning curve." The CD follows the text very closely, and although it intentionally does not go into all the detail contained in the text, it provides an excellent overview of the material in each lesson. We expect that many users will find it advantageous to go through the CD presentation for each lesson prior to working through the lesson in detail.

OVERVIEW OF THE LESSONS:

Lesson 1 - User Interface, View Controls and Model Structure

How to start Pro/E; representation of Pro/E command syntax; command flow in Pro/E; special mouse functions; Pro/E windows; controls for managing the view and display of objects; the model tree; how parts and assemblies are structured.

Lesson 2 - Creating a Simple Object (Part I)

Creating a simple part using sketched features; datum curves; Sketcher and Intent Manager are introduced; sketching constraints, alignments, and procedures; feature database functions are introduced; part templates.

Lesson 3 - Creating a Simple Object (Part II)

Placed features (hole, chamfer, round) are added to the block created in Lesson #2; listing and naming features; modifying dimensions; adding relations to control part geometry; more Sketcher tools; implementing design intent.

Lesson 4 - More Features for Creating Parts

A new part is modeled using a number of different feature creation commands and options: both sides protrusions, an axisymmetric (revolved) protrusion, a cut, rounds, and chamfer. More Sketcher tools. Edge sets. Mirrored features. Model analysis tools. We will intentionally make some modeling errors to see how Pro/E responds.

Lesson 5 - Modeling Utilities, Parent/Child Relations, and the 3 R's

These utilities are used to investigate and edit your model: changing references, change feature shapes, changing the order of feature regeneration, changing feature attributes, and so on. Suppressing and resuming features. If your model becomes even moderately complex, you will need to know how to do this!

Lesson 6 - Sketcher Tools and Datum Planes

More tools in Sketcher are introduced, including sketching relations. The mysteries of datum planes and make datums are revealed! What are they, how are they created? How are they used to implement design intent?

Lesson 7 - Patterns and Copies

Creating a counterbored hole and hole notes. Patterns (one-dimensional or two-dimensional); radial patterns of placed and sketched features. Pattern groups. Copies using translation, rotation, or mirroring.

Lesson 8 - Creating an Engineering Drawing

This lesson will introduce you to the process of making dimensioned engineering drawings. Two new parts are created (both parts will also be used in Lesson #9 on assemblies). Much of the work in creating the drawing is done by Pro/E, although a fair amount of manual labor must go into improving the cosmetics of the drawings.

Lesson 9 - Assembly Fundamentals

This lesson will show you how to create an assembly from previously created parts. This involves creating placement constraints that specify how the parts are to fit together. Assigning appearances (colors).

Lesson 10 - Assembly Operations

This lesson will show you how to make modifications to the assembly created in Lesson #9. This includes changing part dimensions, adding assembly features, suppressing and resuming components, creating exploded views, and creating an assembly drawing. Display styles.

Lesson 11 - Sweeps and Blends

These are the most complicated (i.e. flexible and powerful) features covered in these lessons. They are both types of solid protrusions, but can also be used to create cuts and slots.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Roger W. Toogood, Ph.D., P.E. is an Associate Professor in the Mechanical Engineering Dept. at the University of Alberta in Edmonton.

Dr. Toogood's research activities in robotics include symbolic generation of equations of motion of rigid and/or flexible link manipulators mounted on fixed or moving bases, development of a natural language interface to a robot controller, kinematics and path planning for automatic obstacle avoidance; and graphical animation and real time control for teleoperation. The dynamic analysis capability has been used to simulate the dynamics and control of a very large flexible manipulator mounted on a moving vehicle traversing rough terrain.

A second area of interest is the application of computer-based tools in mechanical engineering. This has resulted in some expertise in computer graphics and a specific research project in the application of artificial intelligence and expert system technology to mechanical design. Applying AI techniques to the early, conceptual phase of mechanical design, explore diverse design alternatives, without limitations due to either reconceived notions or lack of experience of the human designer, can have the most beneficial effect on the design process.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Pro/ENGINEER Wildfire 2.0 Tutorial & MultiMedia CD   March 31, 2008
Carlos Atherton (Wolcott, CT)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Pro/ENGINEER Wildfire 2.0 Tutorial & MultiMedia CD is a great book.
The CD takes you through a step by step tutorial that gets you up to speed very quickly.
I wish they had books with CDs like this when I started learning ProEngineer back in 1995.
The transition from ProE 2001 to Wildfire was drastic for many old time ProE users, but once you know it it is business as usual.



5 out of 5 stars Pro/ENGINEER Wildfire 2.0 Tutorial & MultiMedia CD   November 6, 2006
Maria Lourdes Ceballos (Abq, NM USA)
0 out of 3 found this review helpful

Just what I was looking for. Great tutorial for any Pro/E newbie


2 out of 5 stars weighing tickoo and toogood   August 24, 2005
M. Nateras (Houston TX)
11 out of 13 found this review helpful

i have both beginner books tickoo's and toogood's

sure tickoo's book is more expensive than toogood's but it's worth every penny.
Put it this way. toogood just brushes through every subject and tells you to "experiment, play, etc". sure i would experiment, but its' frustrating when you dont know your way around (beginner). i dont have time to spend hours "exploring" either.
tickoo spoon-feeds you everything, and can be used easily as a reference guide in case you forget something. try doing that with toogood. you have to dig through his unnecesarily philosophical language. it gets even worse since the book is not arranged step-by-step like a self-teaching book should be.

sure toogood might be a pro at using proe, but knowing is one thing and teaching is another. tickoo has 1/4 of a century teaching experience under his belt (or so i read)

dont cheapen out on this one guys/gals.



2 out of 5 stars go for sham tickoo   March 8, 2005
V. Nanduri (memphis, tn)
14 out of 17 found this review helpful

This book is ok for starters. Just about ok.
It omits (intentional) a whole bunch of features. Toogood barely touches drafting (pro/detail)(omits BOM tables, balloons, some important assembly features - they are available in advanced tutorial). This book leaves a lot to be desired. Only the basic - very basic proengineer tools are discussed in this book. If you really want your money's worth, go for sham tickoo's proengineer wildfire for designers. In tickoo's book, you get a fair knowledge. He discusses good number of menus and options. It is easy to refer back in case of any questions because of the organization of the book. Hope this review is useful.



1 out of 5 stars Problems, Problems and more Problems   October 19, 2004
Devanjan Sarkar (Dallas, TX)
17 out of 20 found this review helpful

Problems, Problems and more Problems. This is the way I would describe the book. This is my view, and I am expressing it as a practicing design engineer.

Errors in this book are too numerous to name and address and far from acceptable as an Engineer. Is Roger an Engineer or a very poor English major.

You will require lots of patience's and time, one cannot effectively get through this book without reference to the companion CD. The quality of the CD is very poor!!

I believe most new users of Pro-Engineer reliant on this tutorial is up the river with out a paddle. The author wrote this book in hopes that you understand and know Pro/E and or assumed that either the reader has previous exposure to an earlier version of Pro-Engineer. The search goes on for a good basic book on Pro/E.