Atomic Knowledge · CATIA

Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA)

CATIA's reusable feature templates — capture a pattern of geometry and instantiate it elsewhere with input geometry substitution.

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Definition

A Power Copy is a packaged set of features (sketches, solids, surfaces) parameterised by input references. Drop the Power Copy into another part, substitute the input references with the new part's geometry, and the geometry regenerates. User Feature is similar but with a more structured input mechanism.

Why it matters

Repeated design patterns (mounting flange, bracket family, drain feature) become Power Copies. Standardising on Power Copies enforces design consistency across projects.

Technical Deep Dive & Core Mechanics

Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA) benefits from the direct-modeling paradigm, which allows face-level manipulation without history-tree dependency. In direct mode, the user selects a face and applies a move, offset, or rotation. The kernel identifies all adjacent faces that must adjust to maintain B-rep validity—fillet faces resize, chamfer faces tilt, and adjacent planar faces extend or trim. This "face recognition" step is what makes direct editing intelligent rather than simple vertex dragging: the kernel infers geometric intent from the face types and adjacency relationships surrounding Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA).

Synchronous or hybrid technology merges parametric and direct approaches: features created parametrically can be edited directly, and the system attempts to update the feature tree to reflect the direct edit. This back-propagation is not always possible—direct edits that contradict the original feature intent (such as moving a fillet face past its parent edge) cannot be expressed in the tree, requiring the system to either absorb the edit as a "move face" feature or flag a conflict. Understanding these hybrid limitations is essential for teams that mix parametric and direct workflows when working with Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA).

Step-by-Step Professional Implementation

Deploying Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA) in a mechanical or product-design production pipeline requires solid modeling discipline and data management:

  1. Set Up the Part/Assembly Template: Start from a company-standard template that pre-configures units, material libraries, default tolerances, and drawing sheet formats. Ensure the design intent is captured through a clean feature tree from the first sketch.
  2. Apply Parametric Constraints Methodically: When building Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA), constrain sketches fully before extruding. Reference stable datum planes and origin geometry rather than edge references that may shift during design changes (avoiding dangling references).
  3. Enrich Metadata for Manufacturing: Populate custom properties (material, finish, heat treatment, part number) in the model's iProperties, custom attributes, or parameters. These feed directly into BOMs, PDM systems, and ERP integrations.
  4. Validate and Release: Run interference detection on assemblies, verify mass properties, and check for rebuild errors or suppressed features. Pass the model through your PDM/PLM check-in workflow with appropriate revision and lifecycle state updates.

Advanced Troubleshooting & Error Diagnostics

Resolution guide for common Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA) issues in parametric modeling environments:

  • Rebuild errors after feature reorder: Moving a feature earlier in the tree causes Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA) to fail with "dangling reference" errors. Resolution: Before reordering, inspect the feature's parent-child relationships (right-click > Parent/Child). Ensure that all referenced geometry (faces, edges, planes) exists at the new position in the tree. Use origin planes and datum features as references instead of model faces to reduce reorder sensitivity.
  • Fillet or chamfer failure on complex geometry: Applying a fillet to edges created by Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA) produces "failed to create fillet" errors. Resolution: Check for tangent edges, very short edges, or edges where the fillet radius exceeds the available face width. Try reducing the radius or splitting the fillet into multiple smaller operations. Some kernels handle variable-radius fillets more robustly than constant-radius fillets for complex edge chains.
  • Assembly interference not detected: Components overlap but the interference check reports no conflicts. Resolution: Verify that all components are fully resolved (not lightweight or suppressed). Check that the interference check settings include the correct component pairs. Surface bodies and reference geometry are typically excluded from interference checks—ensure the overlapping bodies are solid bodies.

Cross-Discipline Collaboration & Handoff

In multi-discipline product development, Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA) must integrate smoothly with downstream manufacturing, simulation, and documentation workflows:

  • Neutral Format Exchange: Export to STEP AP214/AP242 for maximum fidelity when sharing with partners who use different CAD platforms. Validate that feature topology, PMI (tolerances, datums, surface finish), and assembly structure survive the translation. Avoid relying on native formats for external suppliers.
  • PDM/PLM Integration: Check in models through the product data management system with complete metadata (revision, lifecycle state, effectivity). Ensure that the BOM structure visible in the PLM matches the CAD assembly hierarchy, and that released parts are locked from unauthorized edits.
  • Simulation and Manufacturing Handoff: Provide defeatured geometry to FEA analysts (remove cosmetic rounds, simplify internal cavities) and manufacturing-ready geometry to CAM programmers (with GD&T annotations). Coordinate on material specifications and tolerance stack-ups across the design-to-production chain.

Common pitfalls

  • Power Copies with too many input references — substitution becomes confusing.
  • Updating the master Power Copy without updating instances — instances drift.
  • Library Power Copies on a single user's machine — others can't use them.
🛡️

CATIA Ecosystem Context

This concept is a core structural element of the CATIA drafting and engineering environment developed by Dassault Systèmes. Dassault Systèmes' high-end PLM-grade CAD — the production tool of aerospace, automotive, and class-A surface modelling.

Explore CATIA Profile › About Dassault Systèmes ›

Relevant CATIA FAQs

Direct answers from our technical editorial desk concerning related workflows.

What's the difference between CATIA and SOLIDWORKS, both Dassault products?

Different markets. SOLIDWORKS is mid-market mechanical CAD (industrial machinery, consumer products). CATIA is high-end (aerospace, automotive, very large assemblies, class-A surfacing). CATIA's learning curve, price, and capability are substantially higher.

Is CATIA available for individual hobbyists?

No. CATIA is sold through VARs to enterprises and educational institutions. Hobbyists looking for similar capability use Rhino (surfacing), Plasticity (modern direct modelling), Onshape (cloud), or older perpetual versions of SOLIDWORKS via student licenses.

What is the difference between V5 and V6?

V5 is the file-based desktop platform (still widely used). V6 was the predecessor to 3DEXPERIENCE — server-stored on ENOVIA V6. CATIA on 3DEXPERIENCE is the current 'V6'-equivalent track. Many organisations run both V5 and 3DX in parallel.

⚡ Concept Self-Test

Test your understanding of this concept to lock in your memory. Completing this quiz will automatically sync to your career learning progress.

Question 1

When working with Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA), which of the following represents a common technical pitfall?

🎓 Recommended Practice Lessons

Step-by-step practical exercises and certification-aligned paths chosen by our editors to master this concept:

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CATIA V5 Complete Professional Course (Udemy)

Deep dive into CATIA's core workbenches: Part Design, Assembly, and Generative Shape Design (GSD) for advanced aircraft-grade wireframes and surfacing.

🌳 Semantic Crossroads & Navigation Pathways

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Practical Workflow Tips

Principles refined through years of parametric modeling and Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA) workflows:

  • Sketch fully before constraining: Draw the complete sketch profile before adding dimensions and constraints. This prevents over-constrained situations that require deleting and re-adding constraints.
  • Reference origin planes, not model faces: When positioning Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA) features, reference origin planes or datum planes rather than model faces. Origin planes never change topology.
  • Name features in the tree: Rename each feature from its default name to a descriptive name. In complex models with 200+ features, named features save minutes per search and make design intent readable.
  • Use configurations for variants: Rather than creating separate files for Power Copy / User Feature (CATIA) size variants, use configurations or design tables. This keeps all variants linked to a single master definition.

Sources & further reading

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