Q1. Which file contains all the drawing document-specific information, such as specifications for units, drafting standard, font selections, etc?
- SOLIDWORKS drawing template
- SOLIDWORKS composer file
- SOLIDWORKS part file
- SOLIDWORKS sheet format
Q2. You need to design a steel spring with a pitch diameter of 3 inches, free length of 10 inches, and pitch of 1 inch. How would you accomplish this in SOLIDWORKS?
- Create a new sketch of a circle with a diameter of 1 inch. Then use the Helix/Spiral curve command and define a height of 10 inches and pitch of 3 inches.
- Create a new sketch of a circle with a diameter of 3 inches. Then use the Helix/Spiral curve command to define a height of 10 inches and pitch of 1 inch.
- First, create a new sketch of a circle of 10 inches. Then use the Helix/Spiral curve command and define by pitch of 1 inch and 3 revolutions.
- Use the Helix/Spiral curve command and define a diameter of 3 inches, height of 10 inches, and pitch of 1 inch.
- Loft
- Extruded Boss/Base
- Sweep
- Revolved Boss/Base
- constant size
- variable size
- face
- angled
Q5. Your sketch is not extruding correctly. It does not seem to be a properly closed contour, although from a simple visual inspection, it looks to be fully closed. You think perhaps there are some very small gaps in your contour that are causing the issue. What tool can you use to find these small gaps?
- Quick Snaps
- Rebuild
- Repair Sketch
- Show Error
- chamfer
- extrusion
- fillet
- shell
Q7. You want to make two circles have the same center point within a SOLIDWORKS sketch. How can you do this?
- Add a tangent relation between the circles
- Add a concentric relation between the circles
- Add a horizontal relation between the circles
- Add an equal relation between the circles
- sphere
- plane
- point
- axis
- feature
- relation
- extrude
- dimension
Q10. You want to focus on a single component within your assembly and hide all the rest. How can you do this?
- Right-click the component you want to focus on and select Change Transparency
- Right-click the component you want to focus on and select Hide
- Right-click the component you want to focus on and select Isolate
- Right-click the component you want to focus on and select Suppress
- It will delete the original part and save the current part with a new name
- It will keep the original part and save the current path with a new name
- It will save both the original part and the new part in the current state
- It will rename the original part
Q12. You want to show a list of the raw materials, subassemblies, intermediate assemblies, subcomponents, and parts, and the quantities of each, needed to manufacture an end product. What would be useful to accomplish this?
- bill of material
- isometric view
- exploded view
- hole list
Q13. Freezing a portion of a model can be used if you work with complex models with many features. Why
- Freezing the features helps to show only the critical features of the model
- Freezing the features helps to show the internal features of the model
- Freezing the features helps to reduce the rebuild time and prevent unintentional changes to the model
- Freezing the features helps to show the external features of the model
- Revolved Boss/Base, Shell, and Sweep
- Shell, Revolved Boss/Base, and Extruded Boss/Base
- Extruded Boss/Base, Revolved Boss/Base, and Sweep
- Draft, Extruded Boss/Base, and Shell
- parallel
- coindicent
- equal
- concentric
- Click the feature in the FeatureManager design tree or graphics area, then select Surpress
- Drag the feature to the Suppression folder, located at the top of the FeatureManager design tree
- You cannot remove features temporarily-you can only delete them completely
- Drag the feature to the bottom of the FeatureManager design tree, then drag the Supression bar above it
Q17. You want to show an assembly's components spread out and positioned to show how they fit together when assembled. How do you accomplish this?
- Use Assembly Visualization
- Use a bill of materials
- Use isometric view
- Use exploded view
- Drag the loft connectors to the correct position, or use guide curves
- Reduce the spacing between the loft profiles, then scale the loft body as required
- Loft shapes are driven entirely by the loft profiles, adjust the skecthes to remove any ambiguity in the loft path
- Ensure that the Twist Along Path option is not selected
Q19. When creating a sweep feature, you receive this error: "Cannot get to a point on the path to start with. For an open path, the path must intersect with the section plane." How can you fix this?
- Ensure that the path skecth touches the profile skecth at some point
- Select the Path Merge option within the sweep feature
- Select the Path Intersection option within the sweep feature
- Edit the path skecth and reduce any areas of tight curvature
Q20. With injection molding, one common manufacturing requirement or preference is applying a taper or angle to faces to help with part removal from the mold. Which feature can help you meet this requirement?
- Loft
- Draft
- Wrap
- Sweep
Q21. You want to simplify a very large and complex assembly to improve performance while working within it. What should you use?
- DFMXpress
- SpeedPak
- a flexible subassembly
- Design Checker
- second angle projection
- fourth angle projection
- first angle projection
- third angle projection
Q23. You have a single line within a sketch that you would like to split into three separate lines. How can you achieve this?
- Use the Offset Entities tool
- Use the Split Line tool
- Use the Split Entities tool
- Use the Split tool
- inflection point
- control point
- spline point
- spline handle
Q25. You want to build a new part within an assembly to ensure in-context relations and dimensions. You also want to save out this part file as its own unique file. After navigating to the Assembly ribbon tab, what do you do next?
- Under Insert Component, select Part to create a new in-context part. Right-click the new part and select isolate
- Select Insert Component to create a new in-context part. Right-click te new part and select Save Part (in External File)
- Under Insert Components, select New Part to create a new in-context part. Right-click the new part and select Save Selection
- Under Insert Components, select New Part to create a new in-context part. Right-click the new part and select Save Part (in External File)
- Click View > Toolbars > CommandManager
- Click View > Toolbars > FeatureManager
- Click View > Toolbars > MotionManager
- Click View > Toolbars > Task Pane
Q27. Representing a three-dimensional object by a number of two-dimensional views is generally called
- isometric projection
- oblique projection
- object projection
- orthographic projection
- Select the feature name and press F2, or slow-double-click the feature name
- Select the feature name and press F3 key, or right-click the feature name
- Select the feature name and press F7, or quick-double-click the feature name
- Select the feature name and press F5 key, or double-click the feature name
- It creates a fillet that is tanget to the direction of view
- It creates a fillet that varies in size, depending on lcoal tangency
- It creates a constant-size fillet around all selections
- It extends the fillet to all faces that are tangent to the selected face
Q30. You notice that one of the subassemblies in your main assembly is rigid and does not have mobility it should. How can you resolve this issue?
- Select the subassembly and then select Make Subassembly Flexible from the context menu
- Select the subassembly and then select Set Resolved from LightWeight from the context menu
- Select the subassembly and then select Edit Assembly from the context menu
- Select the subassembly and then select Make Independent from the context menu
Q31. You dimension an arc in a drawing and notice that the dimension is coming in as the radius value. You want to show the diameter value. To do this, first you click the dimension to open the dimension PropertyManager. What do you do next?
- On the Leaders tab, select Diameter
- On the Other tab, select Diameter
- On the Value tab, and select Diameter
- On the Value tab, seect Override Value
- The parent is Base Feature; the children are Slot Cutout, Skect3, CBORE Hole, and Fillet2
- The parent is Vertical Boss; the childre are Base Feature, Slot Cutout, Sketc3, CBORE Hole, and Fillet2
- The parent is Base Feature; the children are Vertical Boss, Slot Cutout, Sketch3, CBORE Holde, and Fillet2
- The parents are Vertical Boss and Base Feature; the children are Slot Cutout, Sketch3, CBORE Hole, and Fillet2
- BASE
- LINK 3
- LINK 5
- LINK 1
- a hole table
- a revision table
- a tolerance table
- a punch table
- smart dimensioning
- angular running dimensioning
- ordinate dimensioning
- chain dimensioning
- countersink and counterbore
- counterbore and countersink
- standard and threaded/tapped
- threaded/tapped and standard
- an open contour sketch
- a multi-contour or intersecting sketch
- a triple contour sketch
- a closed contour sketch
- Yes, you can extrude it using the standard extrude boss option
- Yes, you can extrude it using the Selected Contours option
- No, the sketch is an open contour and this cannot be extruded
- Yes, you can extrude it using the Thin Feature option