Mastering Advanced Assemblies in TigerCad

Top 10 TigerCad Tips Every Designer Should Know

1. Learn keyboard shortcuts

Memorize common shortcuts for actions like sketch, extrude, fillet, dimension, and undo to speed up work significantly.

2. Start with parametric sketches

Build sketches using fully constrained, parametric dimensions so parts update predictably when you change values.

3. Use construction geometry

Convert helper lines and points to construction mode to keep reference geometry separate from solid profiles.

4. Organize features into meaningful folders

Group related sketches, features, and bodies into folders or named feature sets for easier navigation and edits.

5. Master assembly mates and constraints

Use the full set of mate types (coincident, concentric, tangent, distance) and limit degrees of freedom for stable assemblies.

6. Leverage pattern and mirror tools

Use linear, circular, and table-driven patterns plus mirror operations to avoid redundant modeling and ensure symmetry.

7. Use derived and linked parts

Create derived parts or link geometry between parts to keep design intent across multiple components and facilitate updates.

8. Check model for manufacturability early

Run interference checks, draft analysis, and wall-thickness checks early to avoid downstream manufacturing issues.

9. Save incremental versions with clear names

Use versioned filenames or in-app revisions with descriptive notes (e.g., part_v02_holeRelocated) to track changes and rollback.

10. Create and reuse templates

Set up part, assembly, and drawing templates (units, layers, title blocks, standard views) so new files start with consistent standards.

If you want, I can expand any tip into step-by-step instructions or create keyboard shortcut cheat sheet tailored to TigerCad.

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