Subassembly Composer For Autocad Civil 3d 2012 Download
So last night I installed Civil 3D 2013 (you can download it from subscription if you want). I was in a hurry to get to bed and I almost did it.
Download CAD files and utilities - Autodesk Subassembly Composer Support. Autodesk Subassembly Composer Support Pack for AutoCAD Civil 3D 2012. Civil 3D Subassembly Composer All Grown Up. On June 15th, it was no longer available for download, all installed copies were time-bombed, and little information was given to. It works with Civil 3D 2011 and 2012. Posted by Bryan Tanner on at 08:40 AM in AutoCAD Civil 3D, Industry News Permalink.
I almost installed Civil 3D without installing all the functionality of it! When you install, make sure you toggle on the option to install Design Review 2013 (it’s one of the two options, the other option being Civil 3D). Now, expand out the option for Civil 3D and you’ll have two more things you can install, Autodesk Storm and Sanitary Analysis and the Subassembly Composer. You need to make sure you toggle these on if you want to use them. If you installed the software without these, it’s not the end of the world, you can run the install again, expand out Civil 3D, and then toggle them on again. It’s just been announced that the Subassembly Composer that has been available at Autodesk Labs is now an official add on to Autodesk Civil 3D 2011 and 2012. If your Civil 3D is on subscription, log into the subscription website and go get it (well, on or after July 7, 2011 that is).
I was given a bit of a sneak preview of this by Dana Probert, Peter Funk, and Dave Simeone and I got to admit, it looks really cool! I’ve always told my clients that 98% or more of any type of assembly they needed to create could be done with the out of the box subassemblies and the rest could be done if they knew how to program in.net.
Well, this tool just opened up all that custom subassembly creation to the masses of people that don’t know.net (including myself). You can add the basic building blocks of any subassembly; points, links, and shapes using this tool. However, the real power of this tool comes from the additional options, primarily the Decision and Switch tools. These are basically your IF THEN statements within the subassembly. If I’m in fill, do this, if that link is shorter than that other link, do that.
And then you have the Auxiliary tools. Place a test point here and get the intersection of a link from a specific slope from that auxiliary point. Is the elevation of that auxiliary point lower than the end of that link? The possibilities of this tool are mindboggling to say the least.
Want more information? Check out Dana’s video or Cyndi’s blog post, or even those folks over there at Civil4d.com (Matt Kolberg to be specific). This is some pretty exciting stuff so look for more information around the web or possibly even here.
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