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Harnessing AutoCAD Electrical and Inventor Professional to Take
the Pain out of Modeling Wires
This month I'd like
to discuss a topic that many Inventor users may not be familiar
or comfortable with: wires. Often we spend a great deal of time
figuring out precisely where all of the mechanical pieces of a
machine should fit while paying little to no attention to all of
those 'insignificant' details such as wires and hoses. Those
'insignificant' things that actually make our machinery work.
Why do we pay them no attention? It's not really that we feel
they're insignificant; we realize their importance. But we often
ignore them in our designs because they're just too difficult to
model - the time required doesn't justify the benefit. What if
modeling wires and wire harnesses was easier? And what if the
modeling process didn't just give you a visual of the wires and
harness, but allowed you to extract information that could be
used to reduce costs and take time out of the build cycle by
reducing prototypes? That is exactly what the Cable & Wire
Harness Module of Inventor Professional allows you to do.
The Modeling Process
Ok, so maybe you've seen a cooking-show style demonstration of
Pro's Cable & Wire Harness module - you know the one where the
guy pushes a couple of buttons, and... Presto! You've got wires!
I know I was skeptical the first time I saw such a
demonstration. How much work really took place to get to that
point? Hours? Days? Try minutes.
It All Starts with Parts
The process of creating wires and harnesses in Inventor
Professional is actually very simple. It begins with defining 3D
models of your devices and connectors such that they carry
information the Harness module can use. You do this by defining
work points on your models to be 'Pins' that wires are allowed
to attach to.

Figure 1: Adding Pin Definitions to parts is as simple as
clicking on work points.
Give your pins a name unique to that model, and that's it. You
can provide as little or as much detail in the model as you need
- the only bits that matter to the Harness module are those Pin
definitions.
Once you've got all of the connectors and devices modeled,
you're ready to move on to the assembly.
Place Your Parts
The next step in defining your wires and harness is to lay out
your connectors and devices relative to each other in an
assembly. This is just regular assembly modeling, and in fact
depending on the level of detail of your model, many of the
components may already be placed.

Figure 2: Control Box Assembly shown with sketched Harness
Segments
Next, each component occurrence that will have wires attached to
it needs to be given a unique name. This normally corresponds to
the 'Tag' description on the electrical schematic, but in theory
it can be any name you'd like - so long as it's unique. You
apply this name as a 'Harness Property' of the occurrence, and
is placed in the 'RefDes' field.

Figure 3: You can find the RefDes field in the Harness
Properties Dialog.
Sketch Your Segments
The last major modeling step in the process is to sketch in the
actual path of each segment of the Wire Harness. This is very
easy to accomplish, as Inventor Professional allows you to
freehand 3D sketch using offsets from existing faces.

Figure 4: Inventor Professional allows you to pick 3D sketch
points by specifying offsets from existing faces
You can also use existing work points to sketch along - this is
very useful when your harness needs to run through clips or
cutouts in other parts. As you sketch, a bending radius is
automatically applied, so you see an accurate representation of
each harness segment.

Figure 5: Creating the new harness segment takes just 5 clicks
Wire harnesses are Adaptive by default. This is very handy when
you need to re-arrange clips or components. With proper use of
workpoints, your can save yourself a lot of time when those
inevitable changes start rolling in.
That's it for model creation - everything else is either
automatic, or point and click.
Adding Wires
So now you've got pins to run wires from and to, and you've got
harness segments to run them through. How do you add the wires
and run them through the harness? You can accomplish this in two
ways. One is a manual process that you can accomplish solely
within Inventor. The second is a very slick and automatic
process that requires the use of either AutoCAD Electrical, or a
little work with a text editor.
Wrangling Your Wires Manually
Placing wires manually couldn't be easier - simply choose the
type of wire you want to run, and then choose the two pins
connected by the wire.

Figure 6: Wires can be added with 3 clicks
Inventor Professional will add a single straight line segment to
the model that connects the two pins, and it will have the color
corresponding to the type of wire. Pro ships with an extensive
definition of wires, so for most work you probably won’t have to
add any wire definitions. If you need to add a few, they can be
added one at a time though the Cable and Harness library. If you
need to add dozens, you can import them all at once using a
specified format.
Automatic Wire Addition
This is where things start to get really neat. If you have a
list of information about your wires - namely the pin and device
they start from, the pin and device they run to, and the type of
wires they are - the Harness Module can place all of your wires
automatically. Like I mentioned above, you can generate this
list manually using a text editor, but if you have a schematic
created in AutoCAD Electrical, you can extract that information
from the drawings to further automate the process.

Figure 7: Schematic representation of the control box created in
AutoCAD Electrical
There's even a special report type in AutoCAD Electrical
tailored to fit the default configuration of the Inventor
Professional Harness module.

Figure 8: AutoCAD Electrical makes it easy to place wires in
Inventor Professional
Once you’ve got your wire list exported from AutoCAD Electrical,
you’re ready to run the wires. Tell Pro how your wire list is
configured (through a .cfg file), tell it where your wire list
is, and then let it go to work. After a few seconds, you’ll see
all your wires have been run from pin to pin.

Figure 9: Wires imported from AutoCAD Electrical
It’s important to note that while helpful, having AutoCAD
Electrical is not required. You can generate lists of wires
manually and import them in the same fashion, you just need to
stick to a format and tell Inventor Professional what that
format is.
Wrangling Those Rascals
Great, so we have all of our wires in the model now. But what a
mess! Which wires need to run through which harness segments?
How big should each segment be? No worries – as with everything
else up to this point, Professional will do all the work for us
if we’d like.

Figure 10: Automatic Routing optimizes the process and never
misses a wire
Not only will Pro make sure all the wires run through the
harness in the most efficient manner, but it will even size the
harness based on the number and size of wires running through
each segment.

Figure 11: You can let Pro size your harness, or specify your
own diameter if you need to leave room for un-modeled wires.
That’s it for the model creation process. We now have an
adaptive, but more importantly an intelligent model of
our wires and harness. Next month I’ll show you how Inventor
Professional will help you document your new creation, making
the build process much more efficient.
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