
In this lesson, you will learn how to design a part using Solid Edge's Synchronous Technology. Instead of working within a rigid feature tree, Synchronous Technology lets you create and edit geometry by working directly with faces, dimensions, and shapes on the 3D model. This gives you a much more flexible and intuitive workflow, especially when you need to make quick changes or work with imported geometry that does not have a feature history. By the end of this lesson, you will understand the core workflow for creating a part from scratch using this approach.
This lesson walks you through the Bottom-Up assembly design process step by step. Bottom-Up design is the traditional and most common way to build assemblies in Solid Edge. You start by bringing pre-built parts into an assembly document, then you position them and apply assembly relationships to constrain the components in place. This is the approach you will use most often when your individual parts are already designed and you just need to put them together.
In this lesson, you will learn the Top-Down assembly design approach, where you create and modify parts directly within the context of the assembly. This technique is especially powerful for complex assemblies where the shape of one part depends on the position or geometry of the parts around it. You will see the full workflow from start to finish, and you will understand when Top-Down design is a better choice than Bottom-Up, and why many experienced engineers use a combination of both.
This lesson explains how boundaries work in Solid Edge CAM Pro. Boundaries are the regions that define where your cutting operations will take place. If you do not set them up correctly, your tool paths may extend into areas where you do not want the tool to cut, or they may miss areas that need to be machined. You will learn how to create, modify, and apply boundaries so that you have full control over exactly where your tool paths are generated.
In this lesson, you will learn how to set up a dovetailing operation in CAM Pro. Dovetail cuts are commonly used for joints and interlocking assemblies, and getting the parameters right is important for a good result. This lesson covers the settings you need to configure and shows you how to create a clean dovetail operation from start to finish.
Sometimes the auto-generated tool paths in CAM Pro extend beyond where you actually need the tool to cut. When that happens, you need to manually trim them. This first lesson covers the basic workflow for manually trimming a tool path, giving you precise control over where the cutting starts and stops. This is a fundamental skill for anyone doing serious CNC programming in CAM Pro.
This lesson continues where Part 1 left off, covering additional trimming scenarios and more advanced options for refining your tool paths. By the end of both parts, you will be comfortable trimming any tool path to match your exact machining requirements.
In this lesson, you will learn how to divide a single tool path into separate segments. Dividing tool paths is useful when you need to process different sections of a path independently, reorder certain portions of an operation, or apply different cutting parameters to specific parts of a path. This gives you more flexibility in how your machining operations are organized and executed.
Every tool change during machining adds time to your cycle. In this lesson, you will learn how to organize and optimize your CAM operations around tool changes so that you minimize the number of times the machine has to swap tools. This is a practical tip that directly reduces your machining cycle time and improves shop floor efficiency.
If you are machining a part that has symmetrical features or repeating patterns, you do not need to program the same tool paths twice. This lesson shows you how to use the Transform and Mirror operations in CAM Pro to duplicate and mirror existing tool paths. This can save you a significant amount of programming time, especially on parts with complex symmetry.
The Operation Navigator is where you manage all of your machining operations in CAM Pro, and by default it may not show you all the information you need at a glance. In this lesson, you will learn how to customize which columns are displayed in the navigator so that you can see the details that matter most to your specific workflow, whether that is tool numbers, feed rates, spindle speeds, or any other parameter.
This quick lesson shows you how to add notes and annotations to your CAM Pro operations. Notes are a simple but important way to document your manufacturing process, leave instructions for shop floor operators, or remind yourself of specific details when you come back to a project later. Keeping your CAM projects well-documented makes handoffs and revisions much smoother.
This lesson introduces you to the core workflow in Solid Edge Inspector. You will learn how to apply balloons to your drawing and identify the inspection characteristics the specific dimensions and features that need to be measured and verified during quality inspection. Ballooning is the foundation of everything else you will do in Inspector, so it is important to understand how it works and how to apply it correctly from the start.
Once your balloons are placed, you will likely need to adjust their properties to match your company's quality standards and documentation requirements. This lesson shows you how to configure balloon numbering, appearance, and behavior. Getting these settings right ensures that your inspection documents are consistent and professional, no matter who creates them.
The CN Table, or Bill of Characteristics, is one of the most important deliverables that comes out of Solid Edge Inspector. It is a structured list of every inspection characteristic, including nominal values, tolerances, and measurement methods. In this lesson, you will learn how to create and manage your CN Table, and you will see how it ties together all the ballooning and characteristic work you did in the previous lessons. This is a must-know for anyone working in a quality department.
Every organization has its own tolerance standards, and Solid Edge Inspector lets you define custom tolerance tables so that the correct tolerances are applied automatically when you set up your inspection characteristics. This lesson walks you through how to create, manage, and apply these custom tables, ensuring consistency across all of your inspection projects and eliminating the need to manually enter tolerances every time.
In this lesson, you will learn how to build custom inspection reports from scratch in Solid Edge Inspector. Most companies have specific formats and layouts for their quality documentation, and the default templates may not match what your team needs. This lesson takes you through the process of creating report templates that include exactly the right data in exactly the right format so that your quality reports are ready to use without additional editing.
Column mapping is what controls which data fields show up in each column of your custom report. In this lesson, you will learn how to map the columns in your Inspector reports so that each column pulls in the correct information — whether that is a characteristic number, a nominal value, a tolerance, a measurement result, or any other data field. This gives you full control over the layout and content of your quality documentation.
Property mapping takes your custom reports a step further by linking part properties and inspection data to specific fields in your report template. This means that when you generate a report, the part name, material, revision number, and other properties are automatically filled in without you having to type them manually. This lesson shows you how to set up property mapping so your reports populate themselves with the right data every time.
Once your inspection project is complete with all your balloons, characteristics, tolerance tables, and reports in place you need to export it. This final lesson covers the export options available in Solid Edge Inspector, including the formats you can use for sharing your inspection data with quality management systems, sending it to customers, or archiving it for your records. By the end of this lesson, you will know how to take a finished Inspector project and deliver it in whatever format your stakeholders need.
If you already use Siemens Solid Edge at work and you want to get more done in less time, this course was made for you. It is a focused, practical collection of tips and tricks that covers three major areas of the Solid Edge ecosystem: Part and Assembly Design, CAM Pro for manufacturing, and Solid Edge Inspector for quality inspection and reporting. Every lesson zeroes in on a specific technique or workflow that you can apply right away to speed up your day-to-day work. This course contains 20 lectures across 3 sections, totaling just over one hour of focused content, and training files are included so you can follow along with every single exercise.
This is not a beginner course. I am not going to walk you through installing the software, explain what a sketch is, or show you how to open a file. Instead, I am going to show you the things that experienced Solid Edge users actually need to know — the kinds of techniques and workflows that save you real time on real projects. If you have ever found yourself spending too long figuring out how to trim a tool path, wondering how to set up a proper Top-Down assembly, or struggling to get your inspection reports formatted the way your company needs them, this is the course that will give you those answers. Every lesson is short, practical, and straight to the point. No filler, no unnecessary theory this course will cover just real workflows demonstrated on real models.
WHAT THIS COURSE COVERS
This course is organized into three sections, each one focusing on a different part of the Solid Edge ecosystem. You do not have to go through them in order. If you are a CNC programmer who only cares about CAM Pro, jump straight to Section 2. If you are a quality engineer, go directly to Section 3. The sections are designed to stand on their own, so you can take what you need and come back to the rest later.
SECTION 1 : PART AND ASSEMBLY DESIGN
The first section focuses on part design and assembly workflows. You will start by learning how to design parts using Synchronous Technology, which is one of the most powerful capabilities in Solid Edge. Unlike traditional ordered modeling, where every feature is stacked in a rigid history tree, Synchronous Technology lets you create and modify geometry by working directly with faces, edges, and dimensions on the 3D model itself. This means you can grab a face, move it, resize it, or reposition it without worrying about the order in which features were created. It is especially useful when you are working with imported geometry from other CAD systems that comes in without any feature history, because Synchronous Technology lets you edit those models as if you had built them yourself.
After that, you will walk through both of the major assembly design approaches: Bottom-Up and Top-Down. In the Bottom-Up approach, you design all your individual parts first, then bring them into an assembly document and constrain them using assembly relationships. This is the traditional method and it works well when your parts are relatively independent of each other. You will see the full process step by step, from placing the first component to applying the relationships that hold everything together.
Then you will learn the Top-Down approach, which flips things around. Instead of designing parts separately and then assembling them, you create and modify parts directly in the context of the assembly. This is incredibly useful when the shape of one part depends on the geometry or position of the parts around it. For example, if you are designing a bracket that needs to fit precisely between two other components, it makes much more sense to design it in place, referencing the surrounding geometry, rather than trying to guess the dimensions and hope everything lines up. You will learn when to use each approach and why experienced engineers often use a combination of both, depending on the situation.
SECTION 2 : CAM PRO MANUFACTURING
The second section dives into Solid Edge CAM Pro, which is the integrated manufacturing module for CNC programming. This section contains nine lessons, and they cover the topics that CNC programmers and manufacturing engineers deal with most often when setting up machining operations.
You will start by learning how boundaries work. Boundaries are the regions that tell CAM Pro where you want your cutting operations to take place. If your boundaries are not set up correctly, your tool paths might extend into areas you do not want to machine, or they might miss areas that need to be cut. Understanding how to create, modify, and apply boundaries correctly is one of the most fundamental skills in CAM Pro, and this lesson makes sure you have it locked down.
Next, you will learn how to create a dovetailing operation. Dovetail cuts are a common machining feature used in joints, slides, and interlocking assemblies, and setting up the operation correctly requires understanding the right parameters and settings. This lesson walks you through the entire process so you can create clean, accurate dovetail operations.
One of the most practical parts of this section covers manually trimming tool paths. CAM Pro does a good job generating tool paths automatically, but there are plenty of situations where the generated path extends beyond where you actually need the tool to cut. Maybe it wraps around a corner you want to leave alone, or it enters an area that will be machined in a separate operation. When that happens, you need to know how to manually trim the path. This is covered in two parts. Part 1 gives you the basic trimming workflow, and Part 2 goes into additional scenarios and more advanced options. By the end of both lessons, you will be confident trimming any tool path to match your exact requirements.
You will also learn how to divide tool paths into separate segments. This is useful when you want to process different parts of a path independently, change the order of operations, or apply different cutting parameters to specific sections. It gives you much more flexibility in how your machining sequence is organized.
Then there is a lesson on optimizing your operations around tool changes. Every time the CNC machine has to swap tools, it adds time to the cycle. If you organize your operations intelligently for example grouping operations that use the same tool together then you can significantly reduce the number of tool changes and cut down your overall machining time. This lesson shows you exactly how to do that.
The Transform and Mirror lesson is another big time-saver. If your part has symmetrical features or repeating patterns, you do not need to program the same tool paths from scratch for each instance. Instead, you can duplicate and mirror an existing tool path using the Transform and Mirror operations. This can save you a huge amount of programming time, especially on complex parts with multiple identical features.
Finally, you will learn how to customize the Operation Navigator so it displays the columns and information that are most relevant to your workflow, and how to apply notes to your operations so that your projects are well-documented and easy for other people on your team to understand.
SECTION 3 : SOLID EDGE INSPECTOR
The third and largest section of this course is dedicated to Solid Edge Inspector, which is the tool for quality inspection planning, documentation, and reporting. This section contains eight lessons and covers the full workflow from initial ballooning all the way through to exporting a completed inspection project.
You will start with ballooning and characteristic identification, which is the foundation of everything you do in Inspector. Ballooning is the process of marking up the dimensions and features on your drawing that need to be measured and verified during inspection. Each balloon identifies a specific inspection characteristic, and together they form the basis of your entire inspection plan. This lesson teaches you how to apply balloons correctly and how to identify the right characteristics for inspection.
Once your balloons are in place, you will learn how to configure their properties. This includes controlling the numbering sequence, the visual appearance of the balloons, and their behavior when you make changes to the drawing. Every company has its own standards for how inspection documents should look, and this lesson shows you how to set up your balloon properties to match those standards so that your documents are consistent and professional.
From there, you move into one of the most important topics in the entire course: the CN Table, also known as the Bill of Characteristics. The CN Table is a structured list of every inspection characteristic in your project, and it includes the nominal values, the tolerances, the measurement methods, and any other information that the quality department needs to verify each feature. This is one of the key deliverables that comes out of Solid Edge Inspector, and if you work in quality, it is something you need to know how to create and manage properly. This lesson gives you a thorough walkthrough of the entire process.
You will also learn how to define custom tolerance tables. Rather than manually entering tolerances for every single characteristic, you can create tolerance tables that reflect your organization's specific standards. Once these tables are set up, the correct tolerances are applied automatically when you identify your inspection characteristics. This saves time, reduces errors, and ensures consistency across all of your inspection projects, no matter who is doing the work.
The final three lessons in this section cover custom reports in depth. First, you will learn how to create a custom report template that matches your company's format. Most organizations have specific layouts and data requirements for their quality documentation, and the default report templates in Inspector may not match what you need. This lesson shows you how to build a template from scratch that includes exactly the right information in exactly the right layout.
Then you will learn about column mapping and property mapping, which are the two mechanisms that control how data flows into your reports. Column mapping determines which data fields appear in each column of your report for example things like characteristic numbers, nominal values, tolerances, and measurement results. Property mapping links part-level properties like the part name, material, revision number, and drawing number to specific fields in your report template, so those values are filled in automatically when the report is generated. Together, these two features mean that once your template is set up, your reports essentially build themselves every time you run them.
The section ends with a lesson on exporting your completed Inspector project. You will learn what export options are available, what formats you can use, and how to deliver your inspection data to quality management systems, customers, auditors, or anyone else who needs it.
TRAINING FILES INCLUDED
Training files are included with this course so you can follow along with every exercise. You will be working with the same CAD models, assembly files, CAM setups, and Inspector projects that are shown in the videos. The files are attached as downloadable resources to the relevant lectures, so you can grab them as you go through each section.
WHO IS THIS COURSE FOR
This course is designed for mechanical engineers, manufacturing engineers, CNC programmers, machinists, quality engineers, and inspectors who already have experience working with Siemens Solid Edge and want to learn new techniques to work more efficiently. It is also a great fit for CAD/CAM technicians who are transitioning to Solid Edge from other CAD platforms like SolidWorks, CATIA, or Inventor, and who want to quickly get up to speed on Solid Edge-specific workflows. If you are an engineering student or recent graduate about to enter a role that uses Solid Edge, this course will give you practical, job-ready skills that go beyond what you learned in school.
This course is not designed for complete beginners who have never used any CAD software. You should already be familiar with the basics of the Solid Edge interface before enrolling.
WHAT YOU WILL WALK AWAY WITH
By the end of this course, you will have a solid toolkit of practical, real-world skills that make your work in Solid Edge faster, more organized, and more professional. You will know how to design parts more efficiently using Synchronous Technology, how to build assemblies using the right approach for the job, how to program and optimize CNC tool paths in CAM Pro, and how to create, customize, and export professional inspection documentation in Solid Edge Inspector. These are the kinds of skills that save you time every single day and make you more valuable to your team and your organization.
Enroll now and start working smarter in Solid Edge.