![]() I tried to delete it but, the whole assembly is disturbing because of the absence of that gear. I'm unable to delete that gear because, that gears lie in the timeline at a very early stage, around feature number 4 or 6. But today when I started editing outer big gear (second copy of the original) all big gears started changing. There are more than 250 features in timeline history including joints and motion links.Īfter showing the design to my client (friend), he demanded to add a handle to the outermost big gear. Tones of other components are there which are sketched and developed on the faces of these gears. Using Move command by selecting create copy check box ON. I'm facing this issue, I have an assembly which has 12 big gears and 10 small gears all 12 big gears are copied and pasted from 1 big gear. There should be an easy way to unlink components after pasting.Īny new user will think his copy-pasted components are individual. It's 2020, 5 years passed after reporting this bug still, Autodesk didn't repair it. I came here in the hope of finding a solution but I'm disappointed. Then remove those changes from the original component to restore it to its state prior to those changes. However you can copy/paste-new the clone, and then delete the clone, which allows you to keep any changes you might have made to it. ![]() by accident) that there is no way to break the connection to the original component. It also looks like, once you've created a linked copy (e.g. I'm also having trouble with this - there is no "Paste New" in my Edit menu in version and I can't find a way to unlink a copy of a component from the original component so that I can edit them independently.ĮDIT: looks like you have to look for "Paste New" in the menu that appears when you right-click the top-level "assembly" after you have selected "Copy" for a component. There is no paste new in my menu, how do I break the link to the original sketch so I dont screw that up whilw editing the new version? ![]() Function seems to have been changed since the original post
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