Sirius2
Mechanical
- Dec 15, 2002
- 67
Hi, I wonder if anyone can help me out with a few questions about solidworks.
Im currently an Inventor fan (I know, boo hiss! lol), but we dont currently have any sort of solid modeller at the place I work.
After many many years of telling them we need to get something sorted, it seems that some noise is finally being made in the management. Its a very small company, and money is extremely tight.
We do progressive die, 'crash forms' and other complex tooling. The sheet metal parts are not your average basic fold and notch, almost every part we do tools for have formed aspects to them ie double curves and lips.
We also do jigs and inspection fixtures for automobile exhausts, and manipulating and rotating data is extremely important to get right.
Thats the backround out the way, on with the questions:
1) Some of the data we get from the customer is really sloppy. They are half finished wireframe models, sometimes part of it is surfaced where it shows a form, but they dont bother creating surfaces and properly finished models of the components.
Sometimes its best to work on the tool in 2d to get a feel for it, sometimes people need 2d cad files of the sloppy 3d data sending to them (not just a viewer, usuable 2d CAD data)
Inventor lets you create orthographic 2d drawings from 3d wireframe only sketches, and it lets you create views of single skin surfaces....Can Solidworks do this same task?
I know it may be a 'work around' to try and fix up the data and make it solid....but trust me, the files are extremely bad, so guess Id really like to know if it can draw associative 2d views of 3d wireframe data like Inventor.
Sometimes the fixtures we design are drawn around a 3d wireframe pipework, so to be able to model the fixture around a wireframe without having to make a proper solid of it would be brilliant, and if you can create shop drawings of your "solid" fixture WITH the basic wireframe (to reference dimensions from) on the print, and thus show the 'part' being checked "in situ" that would be what we are ideally needing to do. Is this possible in SW2006?
2) How do you work on customer 2d data in solidworks? I know it can open and do some editing of dwg files, but even though 3d modelling is definately the ultimate way to design, there are times when we get jobs in that demand simple 2d design work, or perhaps alterations of somebody elses tools or fixture drawings where its unfeasable to do the modifications by redrawing the thing in 3d.
How does Solidworks let you design a job in 2d?, is that even possible when its ultimately a 3d design tool?. Obviously in Inventor series we would simply use Autocad 2d, but we wont have that option in SWx from what I gather.....Im not sure. Could you buy Solidworks and design a full 2d job in it? I know we should design in 3d, and the benifits, but sometimes Im not in control of the decision.
3) Ive seen two specific add ons for Solidworks aimed directly at progressive die design. They look absolutely awesome. This is essentaily why Im here, because I know that there isnt one similar for Inventor, and thus wish to suggest Solidworks as a favourable choice in the "mix" simply becuase these add ons will be available to us should we decide to get them in the future.
Has anyone used progressive die add ons here, and if so how are you liking them? The sheet metal manipulaton they offer are simply awesome.
4) We currently do all bills of materials manually. We have to go through every 2d detail drawing once its designed and detailed then jot down the the 'length' 'width' and 'height' of each 'in house' manufactured part and log down the material type, the "number off" used, the general raw stock of steel needed for the toolmakers to make our part from on the shopfloor, create a chart and type in all the data.
Can Solidworks easily automate this and automatically determine the 'extents' of the blocks and the material type and instances? In Inventor it gets hard work, as you have to derive algebric terms for the part sketches, and link that to a custom "parts list", and then it puts the sizes in for you and updates when the "dy - dx" sizes change value on the part.
I know most programs do BOM's, but most of them are aimed at 'bought out' parts, not material 'cut off lists'. A list of screws/dowels/bearings etc are no use to us at all, we need the starting dimensions for the toolmaker to 'block up' to. Will SWx help in this regard?
5) We are "ISO certified", and it takes a long time to alter all the individual part drawing sheets from what we call "working files" to "controlled drawings" status after a period of three months after the tool has left the factory and proved a success. Is there any system within solidworks to automate this task, and for example have "atttributes" on the drawing sheet that change after a particular time span?. Or perhaps run some sort of 'batch script' on selected files and folders that opens the files, looks for the word, replaces the word and saves the file again?.
6) If we dont recieve CAD data from the customer for a sheet metal part, does SW2006 let you model "formed" sheet metal parts, or is like many other programs where the sheet metal tools are more aimed at simple folds, bends, indents and notches?
I cannot lie to you, I love Inventor, however, this is going to be a really big decision in the next 8 months or so, and Im not so stubborn as to not want to look at Solidworks as what could really be the better solution for us longterm. I appreciate that SWx people will love Swx and claim its better anyway etc, but thats always going to be said lol. Inventor would be good for us, but it hasnt the progressive die bolt ons, and some other features too I suspect. I last used swx2003 breifly, and still prefered the Inventor product and interface/way of working, but times do change.
For our needs, both software companies always leapfrog each other, and at any one time, one is always better for us than the other! Its hard to keep up with specific niches and niggles we need the softwares to do, and how they compare (such as the 2d views of 3d wireframe etc) as many of these things arent mentioned in brochures or articles, and in our past experience, VAR's dont realy know those issues deeply when they arrive or when we call....they mostly pump out the broshure speel and the things we all know already, and dont know enough about our sector or the challenges.
Sorry for the long post, and I hope that Ive come to the right place to get an insight .
Many thanks,
Sirius.
Im currently an Inventor fan (I know, boo hiss! lol), but we dont currently have any sort of solid modeller at the place I work.
After many many years of telling them we need to get something sorted, it seems that some noise is finally being made in the management. Its a very small company, and money is extremely tight.
We do progressive die, 'crash forms' and other complex tooling. The sheet metal parts are not your average basic fold and notch, almost every part we do tools for have formed aspects to them ie double curves and lips.
We also do jigs and inspection fixtures for automobile exhausts, and manipulating and rotating data is extremely important to get right.
Thats the backround out the way, on with the questions:
1) Some of the data we get from the customer is really sloppy. They are half finished wireframe models, sometimes part of it is surfaced where it shows a form, but they dont bother creating surfaces and properly finished models of the components.
Sometimes its best to work on the tool in 2d to get a feel for it, sometimes people need 2d cad files of the sloppy 3d data sending to them (not just a viewer, usuable 2d CAD data)
Inventor lets you create orthographic 2d drawings from 3d wireframe only sketches, and it lets you create views of single skin surfaces....Can Solidworks do this same task?
I know it may be a 'work around' to try and fix up the data and make it solid....but trust me, the files are extremely bad, so guess Id really like to know if it can draw associative 2d views of 3d wireframe data like Inventor.
Sometimes the fixtures we design are drawn around a 3d wireframe pipework, so to be able to model the fixture around a wireframe without having to make a proper solid of it would be brilliant, and if you can create shop drawings of your "solid" fixture WITH the basic wireframe (to reference dimensions from) on the print, and thus show the 'part' being checked "in situ" that would be what we are ideally needing to do. Is this possible in SW2006?
2) How do you work on customer 2d data in solidworks? I know it can open and do some editing of dwg files, but even though 3d modelling is definately the ultimate way to design, there are times when we get jobs in that demand simple 2d design work, or perhaps alterations of somebody elses tools or fixture drawings where its unfeasable to do the modifications by redrawing the thing in 3d.
How does Solidworks let you design a job in 2d?, is that even possible when its ultimately a 3d design tool?. Obviously in Inventor series we would simply use Autocad 2d, but we wont have that option in SWx from what I gather.....Im not sure. Could you buy Solidworks and design a full 2d job in it? I know we should design in 3d, and the benifits, but sometimes Im not in control of the decision.
3) Ive seen two specific add ons for Solidworks aimed directly at progressive die design. They look absolutely awesome. This is essentaily why Im here, because I know that there isnt one similar for Inventor, and thus wish to suggest Solidworks as a favourable choice in the "mix" simply becuase these add ons will be available to us should we decide to get them in the future.
Has anyone used progressive die add ons here, and if so how are you liking them? The sheet metal manipulaton they offer are simply awesome.
4) We currently do all bills of materials manually. We have to go through every 2d detail drawing once its designed and detailed then jot down the the 'length' 'width' and 'height' of each 'in house' manufactured part and log down the material type, the "number off" used, the general raw stock of steel needed for the toolmakers to make our part from on the shopfloor, create a chart and type in all the data.
Can Solidworks easily automate this and automatically determine the 'extents' of the blocks and the material type and instances? In Inventor it gets hard work, as you have to derive algebric terms for the part sketches, and link that to a custom "parts list", and then it puts the sizes in for you and updates when the "dy - dx" sizes change value on the part.
I know most programs do BOM's, but most of them are aimed at 'bought out' parts, not material 'cut off lists'. A list of screws/dowels/bearings etc are no use to us at all, we need the starting dimensions for the toolmaker to 'block up' to. Will SWx help in this regard?
5) We are "ISO certified", and it takes a long time to alter all the individual part drawing sheets from what we call "working files" to "controlled drawings" status after a period of three months after the tool has left the factory and proved a success. Is there any system within solidworks to automate this task, and for example have "atttributes" on the drawing sheet that change after a particular time span?. Or perhaps run some sort of 'batch script' on selected files and folders that opens the files, looks for the word, replaces the word and saves the file again?.
6) If we dont recieve CAD data from the customer for a sheet metal part, does SW2006 let you model "formed" sheet metal parts, or is like many other programs where the sheet metal tools are more aimed at simple folds, bends, indents and notches?
I cannot lie to you, I love Inventor, however, this is going to be a really big decision in the next 8 months or so, and Im not so stubborn as to not want to look at Solidworks as what could really be the better solution for us longterm. I appreciate that SWx people will love Swx and claim its better anyway etc, but thats always going to be said lol. Inventor would be good for us, but it hasnt the progressive die bolt ons, and some other features too I suspect. I last used swx2003 breifly, and still prefered the Inventor product and interface/way of working, but times do change.
For our needs, both software companies always leapfrog each other, and at any one time, one is always better for us than the other! Its hard to keep up with specific niches and niggles we need the softwares to do, and how they compare (such as the 2d views of 3d wireframe etc) as many of these things arent mentioned in brochures or articles, and in our past experience, VAR's dont realy know those issues deeply when they arrive or when we call....they mostly pump out the broshure speel and the things we all know already, and dont know enough about our sector or the challenges.
Sorry for the long post, and I hope that Ive come to the right place to get an insight .
Many thanks,
Sirius.