![Stratasys Objet260 Connex User Manual Download Page 46](http://html1.mh-extra.com/html/stratasys/objet260-connex/objet260-connex_user-manual_1383595046.webp)
Objet260 User Guide
5 Using Objet Studio
DOC-37004 Rev. E
5-12
Preparing Models for Production
Model preparation involves the following basic steps:
1. Place objects or assemblies on the build tray.
2. If necessary, manipulate the object’s orientation and position.
3. Select the materials and model finish.
Just as Objet260 printers can produce different models on the build tray
using different materials, you can produce components of a model with
different materials. To do this, each part of the model must be a separate
stl
file.
If the model’s component parts were not saved in the CAD software as
separate
stl
files, you can use Objet Studio to separate the model into
component parts. (This is described in "Splitting Objects into Components"
on page 5-23 and in "Dividing Objects" on page 5-62.)
OBJDF Files:
Overview
An
objdf
file describes both the geometry of a single object and the materials,
and finish required to print it. The
objdf
file can represent an object that is a
single
stl
file, or an object assembled from component
stl
files.
Objet Studio enables you to split an
stl
file representing a complex object into
an assembly of component
stl
files, and save the assembly as an
objdf
file.
Each part (
stl
file) described by the
objdf
file can have its own model-material
characteristic, so that the Objet260 printer produces the component parts
from specific materials.
Another use for
objdf
files is for saving a group of separate objects on the
build tray as one unit, together with their relative positions and materials.
This is especially useful for producing models in the future with the same
materials. In fact, when you save
objdf
files, you specify materials for printing
models without regard to the material cartridges loaded in the printer. The
same object can later be placed on build trays for printing. Each time you
send a build tray to the printer, you decide whether to allow printing with
substitute materials or only with the materials specified.
The Connex version of Objet Studio enables you to display, manipulate and
print component parts of a model assembly that was saved as an
objdf
file,
since each component is a separate
stl
file. This can be useful for printing
only specific parts of a model.
Further explanations of
objdf
files, and their features, appear throughout this
chapter.
Model Files
To produce models, you open one or more model files in Objet Studio and
position objects on the build tray. You can place objects on the build tray in
several ways:
• by inserting individual
stl
files (or an assembly of
stl
files).
• by inserting an objdf file (an assembly).
• by pasting objects that you copied to the Windows clipboard.