mjjmecheng
Mechanical
- Feb 7, 2014
- 17
Good morning all!
Another engineer in my group has a license of BobCAD/CAM that he uses at home for his personal designs. The other day, he brought in a 'mobile' version of his design to show me what he had been working on. I say 'mobile' because instead of a huge zipped file with tens or hundreds of parts in an assembly, this was a simple .exe file that did not require any previously installed utility to open his assembly, hide/show components, and manipulate its position in 3D space. I'm familiar with the generic file types (.stp, .iges., .x_t, etc), but these aren't really what I'm looking for because they still require some application to open them. Instead, I'm interested in any possibilities for doing something similar, where I could send a file showing a 3D view of my assembly to a customer without actually sending them my assembly. Does Unigraphics/NX have an option for that? Is there a method to output a 3D PDF using Unigraphics (or Solidworks for that matter)?
I use NX 8.5 and Solidworks 2014.
Cheers!
Another engineer in my group has a license of BobCAD/CAM that he uses at home for his personal designs. The other day, he brought in a 'mobile' version of his design to show me what he had been working on. I say 'mobile' because instead of a huge zipped file with tens or hundreds of parts in an assembly, this was a simple .exe file that did not require any previously installed utility to open his assembly, hide/show components, and manipulate its position in 3D space. I'm familiar with the generic file types (.stp, .iges., .x_t, etc), but these aren't really what I'm looking for because they still require some application to open them. Instead, I'm interested in any possibilities for doing something similar, where I could send a file showing a 3D view of my assembly to a customer without actually sending them my assembly. Does Unigraphics/NX have an option for that? Is there a method to output a 3D PDF using Unigraphics (or Solidworks for that matter)?
I use NX 8.5 and Solidworks 2014.
Cheers!