VladimirMEngineer
Mechanical
- Apr 9, 2020
- 4
Hi fellow engineers,
Here is my dilemma. I do product design related to automotive industry. It's basically sheet metal, welded profiles, welded sheet metal and standard bars and tubing...
I was thinking that it would be good to expand on that with maybe FEA to be able to better optimize design and check weather what I designed will hold under real word use, which often includes dynamic load, aka. products under load additionally suffering from being driven around in a commercial van which in turn puts more stress on welded joints or bolted connections.
Other than that, I feel it would be useful to always know approximately how much what I design would cost so that I can compare two solutions on that criteria also. Not sure how that could be implemented best. I use SolidWorks for design.
What do you guys think? Is there any other area of engineering that I should also consider to expand to? What would you choose as a next step in improving your engineering work. The stuff I work with doesn't require tight tolerances, thermodynamics or machining parts. It's mostly sheet metal cutting and bending, welding and fastening with nuts and bolts.
Regards,
Vladimir
Here is my dilemma. I do product design related to automotive industry. It's basically sheet metal, welded profiles, welded sheet metal and standard bars and tubing...
I was thinking that it would be good to expand on that with maybe FEA to be able to better optimize design and check weather what I designed will hold under real word use, which often includes dynamic load, aka. products under load additionally suffering from being driven around in a commercial van which in turn puts more stress on welded joints or bolted connections.
Other than that, I feel it would be useful to always know approximately how much what I design would cost so that I can compare two solutions on that criteria also. Not sure how that could be implemented best. I use SolidWorks for design.
What do you guys think? Is there any other area of engineering that I should also consider to expand to? What would you choose as a next step in improving your engineering work. The stuff I work with doesn't require tight tolerances, thermodynamics or machining parts. It's mostly sheet metal cutting and bending, welding and fastening with nuts and bolts.
Regards,
Vladimir