10mm
Mechanical
- Jul 17, 2016
- 17
I used acad for years, then switched to solidworks for the last 10 years. Long story short, I am looking into changing industries due to the oil and gas industry being crippled. I see many jobs for autocad 3d requirements. Well, I thought maybe autocad had really changed and must be practical for modeling since I see all of these job openings for engineers with autocad 3d knowledge. I downloaded the 30 day free trial of autocad. I dont see anything that would make modeling in autocad practical. It is better than it used to be, but really? Can you even go back and change features once it has been finished? Can you do assemblies of 3d models? Maybe it is just for rendering and cosmetics of single parts? Another thing is dimensions... Can I not easily select the dimension text and quickly change it to limit or bilateral? Again, I am used to working with solidworks, so im sure I am spoiled. Im not here to bash autocad. I just wanted to know if im wrong? Im sure that the price difference between autocad vs solidworks/inventor plays a roll.
People laugh when I tell them this, but when I was at Baker Hughes years ago, paperspace was never used. You would simply scale the border up or down to fit the 2d drawing in modelspace. It worked.
There is no situation so bad that you cant make it worse. Cmdr_Hadfield
People laugh when I tell them this, but when I was at Baker Hughes years ago, paperspace was never used. You would simply scale the border up or down to fit the 2d drawing in modelspace. It worked.
There is no situation so bad that you cant make it worse. Cmdr_Hadfield