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CAD Software Alternatives 3

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mjjmecheng

Mechanical
Feb 7, 2014
17
I am very familiar with Siemens NX, Solidworks, and PTC Creo, as I use these daily at work. I have a number of projects at home though that I would like to find a comparable 2D/3D parametric CAD tool for. Can you recommend any inexpensive alternatives to these? I've dabbled a bit in SolidFace and FreeCAD, but have not found them to be quite as intuitive as those I've mentioned above.

Aside from part design, it would be beneficial to find some software that I could run my own thermal/fluid/vibration simulations with. I am familiar with FloTHERM and a few of the Ansys utilities, but wasn't sure of any home-use alternatives.

Thank you!
 
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There is a free version of PTC Creo that's limited to 60 unique parts:
TTFN
faq731-376
7ofakss

Need help writing a question or understanding a reply? forum1529

Of course I can. I can do anything. I can do absolutely anything. I'm an expert!
 
IR Stuff: I'm not familiar with PTC Crea... How do you recommend getting started with that software if I have a good AutoCAD 2D and 3D background? (Old experience now though, i started in Acad in R4, R7....)
 


IRstuff said:
There is a free version of PTC Creo that's limited to 60 unique parts...

I'll give the Creo Elements a try and see how it stacks up against what I'm used to - I appreciate the suggestion.

racookpe1978 said:
I'm not familiar with PTC Crea... How do you recommend getting started with that software if I have a good AutoCAD 2D and 3D background? (Old experience now though, i started in Acad in R4, R7....)

Racookpe1978, some programs like Solidworks have an excellent, built-in set of tutorials and sample parts to play and gain experience with. I've found through my search for a free/inexpensive tool that one of the most valuable resources is the video tutorials that can be found on Youtube. Many of the tutorials are provided in a series by the vendor as a means of exposing potential customers to their products and showcasing its capabilities.

 
mjjmecheng

There are free educational/non-comercial/home versions of all the programs in your list. Solid Edge also has a couple of good free or cheap options.

CAE linux has a bundle of free open source FAE and flow packages.

racookpe1978
Download the free version and give it a try. There are tutorials in the help file to get you started.
 
I'd check out Autodesk's options, mainly Fusion 360.
But, anything in their 123D-series is free and may be good enough for your home-use requirements.

--Scott
www.wertel.pro
 
swertel said:
I'd check out Autodesk's options, mainly Fusion 360.
But, anything in their 123D-series is free and may be good enough for your home-use requirements.

Swertel, I had no idea that Autodesk was doing this 123D suite. The 123D circuits looks like a good little program for me to play around with as it looks dumbed down enough for an ME to build EE stuff...

To keep the topic going, I came across an article that mentioned a SolidWorks "Home Use License". Although I've lost the link to it, it sounds like it is a method by which an employee of a business that has a SolidWorks network license can get a personal license to install/run the software from a home PC... I'll have to ask the IT guys if this is a possibility.

 
mjjmecheng said:
...

To keep the topic going, I came across an article that mentioned a SolidWorks "Home Use License".
...

There have been discussions on here about moonlighting, and about who owns the stuff you design, regardless of where you designed it. What sort of contract did you sign with your employer?

If I am designing something nifty at home, I want to use software I purchased, or otherwise legitimately acquired on my own. If I use software licensed by my current employer, they have a claim to my intellectual property.

--
JHG
 
One of the best alternatives to mainstream solid modeling packages used to be Alibre Design. I've used it extensively and found it comparable to SolidWorks at the time. And a good value, too (about 25% of SW). I just went a-surfing and discovered that Alibre was purchased by Geomagic and renamed Geomagic Design.

I have no idea what is the selling price now. But if it is anything like it used to be then it is worth a look.

TygerDawg
Blue Technik LLC
Virtuoso Robotics Engineering
 
Geomagic Design has not added any design functionality in the last 2 years. They have added functionality to correlate with Geomagic's 3D scanning and printing tools. And, they raised the price of Geomagic Design so it is now in the several thousand dollars range plus maintenance.

While Alibre Design was a good bang-for-the-buck CAD package, Geomagic Design has the same amount of bang but costs a lot more bucks. I'd look into renting Solid Edge on a monthly basis (fyi if you rent for 3 years straight you're better off buying a perpetual license) or some other cloud-based tool.

--Scott
www.wertel.pro
 
drawoh said:
There have been discussions on here about moonlighting, and about who owns the stuff you design, regardless of where you designed it. What sort of contract did you sign with your employer?

Good point drawoh... The kinds of designs I have in mind are home-use things like motorcycle parts and my own 3D printer/CNC machines. Luckily, these are not things of interest for my company as they already own my other IP ...
 
mjjmecheng,

The line between stuff you design that you company owns and stuff you design that you own, can get fuzzy. This is especially true of you leave your place of employment to start a business. Anything you ca do to make things not fuzzy is good. Definitely this includes running your own CAD software on your own computers on your own time at home.

--
JHG
 
Note that the free version of PTC Creo that accommodates as many as 60 unique parts is not a parametric program.

Tunalover
 
mjjmecheng Bobslo
Looking for a price on T-flex the sellers seem to be very coy about telling you what it is. I finally found an article by deelip with a price in it. The Alibre/ Geomagic program is now $1900 still a better price than T-Flex , but no longer low cost. Scott Wertel is the guy who started the Alibre/ Geomagic forum on this web page, and it is very telling that he is recommending Acad.123.
B.E.


You are judged not by what you know, but by what you can do.
 
 http://www.deelip.com/?p=123
That'd good to know!

A few other programs that I've come across are BobCAD/CAM and Rhino. Rhino seems to be in the ~$900 range from what I recall and BobCAD/CAM is nearer the $1500 price. Although Rhino has an easily accessed demo to download, I have not played around with it or BobCAD too long.

My first impression of BobCAD is that it is based very strongly around the fabrication of the component (mill/lathe/sheet-metal operations) while it lacks a little in the intuitiveness of its design capabilities. Rhino, in my opinion, is similar to the PTC Creo demo that was recommended above. Don't take these opinions to heart though because they are only based on a few hours of experimenting.
 
mjjmecheng,

I was running back through some of the earlier posts and caught a hint at something else (that will hopefully not drive this thread off topic).

If you are an ME looking to do a few EE designs at home, I recommend also take a look at While Autodesk did acquire Circuits.io and is a "higher end" electrical schematic/design tool, the Circuitlab editor may be fun enough.

--Scott
www.wertel.pro
 
Another program worth a look is IronCAD. I've only heard of it. Never used it.


Tunalover
 
If only Mike were still around to yell 'TurboCAD' at the top of his virtual voice.

Posting guidelines faq731-376 (probably not aimed specifically at you)
What is Engineering anyway: faq1088-1484
 
You mentioned FreeCAD, which seems to be developing quite well into a usable free and open source CAD tool. That said, it's not nearly as capable as the commercial options.

As far as simulation goes, look into CalculiX. I've been playing around with it and it seems to be quite capable. Tetrahedral meshes can be created with software like NetGen or GMsh, and you can do a wide array of simulations (structural models, flow networks, contact analysis, creep analysis, thermal analysis, etc.).

OpenFoam also seems to be a fairly capable CFD tool, although I admittedly haven't used it.

All of those analysis programs have a learning curve, but they also seem to be quite capable.
 
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