My company had decided to look at possible upgrades to our CAD system. We have no biases towards one program or another.
We
are currently using Autocad Mechanical, version 2002 through 2007.
We do not do any real complex designs or
surfacing. Primarily it is large steel/aluminum assemblies, comprised
of large, thick plates machined to fairly high accuracies (flatness and
perp. specs as low as .001-.002" over 7'), with multiple shafts and
rolls. Basically converting machinery. With sheet metal enclosures.
Some images can be seen here, if that helps visualize (paper/web converting machinery): http://www.faustel.com/products.cfm?id=1
http://www.faustel.com/products.cfm?id=3
I figure the top 3 choices for us would be Pro/E, SolidWorks, Inventor. Followed closely by, staying with what we have...
After
searching the net heavily for reviews and comparisons I have found this
site, and its users to be extremely well versed in all these software
packages and I am hoping that you can help me to decide, or at least
bring up the best parts of each package.
The biggest factors would be: ease of use/training, cost (upfront and maintenance), which ones may take more time now and which will save the most time down the road. Also any input on which work better as parts libraries and updating assemblies after part modifications.
Thanks for any help on any or all of the areas...
We
are currently using Autocad Mechanical, version 2002 through 2007.
We do not do any real complex designs or
surfacing. Primarily it is large steel/aluminum assemblies, comprised
of large, thick plates machined to fairly high accuracies (flatness and
perp. specs as low as .001-.002" over 7'), with multiple shafts and
rolls. Basically converting machinery. With sheet metal enclosures.
Some images can be seen here, if that helps visualize (paper/web converting machinery): http://www.faustel.com/products.cfm?id=1
http://www.faustel.com/products.cfm?id=3
I figure the top 3 choices for us would be Pro/E, SolidWorks, Inventor. Followed closely by, staying with what we have...
After
searching the net heavily for reviews and comparisons I have found this
site, and its users to be extremely well versed in all these software
packages and I am hoping that you can help me to decide, or at least
bring up the best parts of each package.
The biggest factors would be: ease of use/training, cost (upfront and maintenance), which ones may take more time now and which will save the most time down the road. Also any input on which work better as parts libraries and updating assemblies after part modifications.
Thanks for any help on any or all of the areas...