![solidworks toolbox not installed solidworks toolbox not installed](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/5S5upW-tt6o/hqdefault.jpg)
For optimized display, we suggest upgrading your browser to Internet Explorer 7 or newer. We have detected you are using a browser version older than Internet Explorer 7. The documentation team cannot answer technical support questions.Ĭlick here for information about technical support. Use the form below to send your comments and suggestions about this topic directly to our documentation team. As Toolbox administrator, you decide how Toolbox component files are defined in an assembly: as single files with many configurations, or as new part files for each component size. When you assign part numbers and properties in advance, users do not have to do this each time they reference a Toolbox component.Īs Toolbox administrator, you can streamline Toolbox by filtering out the default Toolbox components that are not required by your organization. As Toolbox administrator, you can assign part numbers and other custom properties such as material to Toolbox components before users reference them, making assembly design and BOM generation more efficient. Users spend less time searching for components or deciding which ones to use. Trimming the size of Toolbox makes it more efficient. As Toolbox administrator, you filter the default Toolbox offerings so that Toolbox users can access only those components required by your organization. As Toolbox administrator, you decide where to locate the Toolbox folder on the network.īy default, Toolbox includes more than component types of different sizes for 12 tool standards, as well as other industry-specific content, resulting in millions of components. The Toolbox folder must be accessible to all users. The Toolbox folder is the central location for the Toolbox components. In addition, you should know the part number, description, and material required for each type of Toolbox component. Level q booksĪs administrator, you are familiar with the standards required by your organization, as well as which components, such as nuts and bolts, your users require on a daily basis. When you customize the Toolbox offerings to include only selected component sizes and standards, you customize the hole sizes offered by the Hole Wizard and Smart Fastener offerings as well. You can also control access to the Toolbox library to prevent users from changing the Toolbox components, specify how component files are handled, and assign part numbers and other custom properties to Toolbox components. As Toolbox administrator, you can place the toolbox components in a central location on your network and streamline Toolbox to include only parts that comply with your corporate manufacturing standards. Toolbox users select a standard and type of part and drag a Toolbox component into an assembly.