Pro/e help, training, tutorials and other resources

Discussion in 'Pro/Engineer & Creo Elements/Pro' started by David Janes, Apr 6, 2006.

  1. David Janes

    David Janes Guest

    For help with Pro/e, start with this. It's the user area of the PTC website which
    has several free introductory tutorials on WF & WF2:
    http://www.ptc.com/community/proewf2/newtools/index.htm

    The three listed below provide professional training courses on every function
    within Pro/e, including on Intralink PDM. All offer project-based, hands-on
    training. CADTRAIN is strictly CBT, everything online, downloadable training
    files, Camtasia based demos, onscreen tutorials with screen captured graphics.
    CADquest, on the other hand, is textbook based with downloadable training files.
    Those from CADTRAIN and CADquest are full, PTC-style courses and parallel PTC's
    course structure. Frotime, which also does CBT, has shorter, more partial tutorial
    style training. They're approaching course structure by offering several tutorials
    on the same functionality, such as Surfacing 1, 2, & 3 and Advanced Surfacing 1,
    2, & 3. With each costing around $15 and a Surfacing Subscription (6-8 tutorials)
    costing $60, they have pricing structure suited to invididuals who don't have
    corporate resources behind them. In addition, about one into course in each series
    is free.

    CADTRAIN
    http://www.cadtrain.com/
    CADquest
    http://www.cadquest.com/
    Frotime
    http://www.frotime.com/

    Community Colleges and Universities: PTC has an extensive network of schools that
    either train students in Pro/e software or use it to teach
    drafting/modelling/engineering/design. If you know of such a school, they likely
    have an Educational License which lets them offer any course taught by PTC. Here's
    a peek at the educational version and what it contains:
    http://www.ptc.com/appserver/mkt/educational/program.jsp?&im_dbkey=33880&icg_dbkey=851
    It has the advantage of spreading what would normally be a 40 hour sprint through
    a ton of new material over an 8-12 week period. Lot's more opportunity to get
    comfortable with the software and likely new concepts of design, lots more tube
    time and time to ask questions of an experienced user. It's where I got most of my
    formal training; I highly recommend it.

    Numerous books, one by Roger Toogood, another by L. G. Lamit and several
    specifically on sheetmetal with WF2. All available on Amazon for under $60, they
    provide a good, broad overview of working with WF2. All by professional writers
    and teachers. Lamit, for example, has been teaching Pro/e for over a decade at De
    Anza College, Cupertino CA (Silicon Valley) and has written several books on
    Pro/e. Toogood's authored most of the Student Edition Tutorials since I-squared at
    least. These guys know Pro/e.

    Student Edition from Journey Ed:
    http://proestudent.com/default.asp?action=selectLocation
    for $150, you get the Flex3C version of the software ($20,000 retail value), help
    files and one of the above books on CD with training files in SE format. Pro/e was
    the first, and for a while, the only major player in solids modelling, with a
    Student Edition of the program plus a longstanding, comprehensive training program
    accessible from the SE. On your own PC, with complete autonomy, you have full
    access to the entire power of Pro/ENGINEER design software. And most PCs, with a
    decent, OpenGL-compatible graphics card, can do the job.

    PTC University:
    http://www.ptc.com/learning
    Don't underestimate learning it straight "from the horses mouth". Don't know what
    it takes to sign up for this, probably a year's maintenance/support agreement,
    paid in advance. Still, if you've got it, this is a valuable resource: what you'd
    get in a class, no travel involved, all you need is a terminal with pro: complete,
    comprehensive, convenient. Sit at home and learn from PTC. I think this is
    extremely cool. Just like their webcasts, 'How to' and 'Tips and Tricks' sessions.

    PTC offers, directly, and indirectly supports, more educational and training
    opportunities than any other corporation on earth. The user community lags
    pitifully behind; not much in the way of free, user developed tutorials and
    training resources available out there. I've heard of some university stuff; also,
    some stuff on websites, but most is out of date, scattered, fragmentary, partial
    elements of a comprehensive training program, and, of this, the community offers
    nothing.


    PTC/USER Email 'Exploder'

    http://www.ptcuser.org/exploder/index.html

    ProECentral has an active colllection of forums

    http://www.proecentral.com/portal/forum/default.asp

    Engineering Tips has a forum for each major CAD software, including Pro/e

    http://www.eng-tips.com/gthreadminder.cfm/lev2/22/lev3/70/pid/554

    http://www.mcaduser.com/

    Also called Pro/e User, this site is a collection of useful links plus a download
    site with, as are most, outdated files. Would be nice if they actually (whoever
    'they' are) tried to develop this thing. For example, they've got a list of sites
    called "Companies that use Pro/e". The list is lame: extremely partial and highly
    incomplete, missing big users in many areas. If they decided to be a little more
    active, open, and responsible, they'd enlist the help of actual Pro/e Users to
    correct their list so that it could be a valuable and reliable resource.

    http://www.caddigest.com/subjects/pro_engineer/tutorials_proe.htm

    http://www.synthx.com/tom/sy_tips.htm

    http://www.elite-consulting.com/pro_engineer hints tips tricks.htm

    http://www.3dlogix.com/3dlogix/3dlogix_tutorials_01_proetfiles.htm

    Here's one suggested by Michael Corbett; though it's not tutorials, it is
    resources
    www.cadregister.com Part of thomasregister.com has models as well.

    David Janes
     
    David Janes, Apr 6, 2006
    #1
  2. David Janes

    Jeff Howard Guest

    <bump>

    ==============================================

    For help with Pro/e, start with this. It's the user area of the PTC website which
    has several free introductory tutorials on WF & WF2:
    http://www.ptc.com/community/proewf2/newtools/index.htm

    The three listed below provide professional training courses on every function
    within Pro/e, including on Intralink PDM. All offer project-based, hands-on
    training. CADTRAIN is strictly CBT, everything online, downloadable training
    files, Camtasia based demos, onscreen tutorials with screen captured graphics.
    CADquest, on the other hand, is textbook based with downloadable training files.
    Those from CADTRAIN and CADquest are full, PTC-style courses and parallel PTC's
    course structure. Frotime, which also does CBT, has shorter, more partial tutorial
    style training. They're approaching course structure by offering several tutorials
    on the same functionality, such as Surfacing 1, 2, & 3 and Advanced Surfacing 1,
    2, & 3. With each costing around $15 and a Surfacing Subscription (6-8 tutorials)
    costing $60, they have pricing structure suited to invididuals who don't have
    corporate resources behind them. In addition, about one into course in each series
    is free.

    CADTRAIN
    http://www.cadtrain.com/
    CADquest
    http://www.cadquest.com/
    Frotime
    http://www.frotime.com/

    Community Colleges and Universities: PTC has an extensive network of schools that
    either train students in Pro/e software or use it to teach
    drafting/modelling/engineering/design. If you know of such a school, they likely
    have an Educational License which lets them offer any course taught by PTC. Here's
    a peek at the educational version and what it contains:
    http://www.ptc.com/appserver/mkt/educational/program.jsp?&im_dbkey=33880&icg_dbkey=851
    It has the advantage of spreading what would normally be a 40 hour sprint through
    a ton of new material over an 8-12 week period. Lot's more opportunity to get
    comfortable with the software and likely new concepts of design, lots more tube
    time and time to ask questions of an experienced user. It's where I got most of my
    formal training; I highly recommend it.

    Numerous books, one by Roger Toogood, another by L. G. Lamit and several
    specifically on sheetmetal with WF2. All available on Amazon for under $60, they
    provide a good, broad overview of working with WF2. All by professional writers
    and teachers. Lamit, for example, has been teaching Pro/e for over a decade at De
    Anza College, Cupertino CA (Silicon Valley) and has written several books on
    Pro/e. Toogood's authored most of the Student Edition Tutorials since I-squared at
    least. These guys know Pro/e.

    Student Edition from Journey Ed:
    http://proestudent.com/default.asp?action=selectLocation
    for $150, you get the Flex3C version of the software ($20,000 retail value), help
    files and one of the above books on CD with training files in SE format. Pro/e was
    the first, and for a while, the only major player in solids modelling, with a
    Student Edition of the program plus a longstanding, comprehensive training program
    accessible from the SE. On your own PC, with complete autonomy, you have full
    access to the entire power of Pro/ENGINEER design software. And most PCs, with a
    decent, OpenGL-compatible graphics card, can do the job.

    PTC University:
    http://www.ptc.com/learning
    Don't underestimate learning it straight "from the horses mouth". Don't know what
    it takes to sign up for this, probably a year's maintenance/support agreement,
    paid in advance. Still, if you've got it, this is a valuable resource: what you'd
    get in a class, no travel involved, all you need is a terminal with pro: complete,
    comprehensive, convenient. Sit at home and learn from PTC. I think this is
    extremely cool. Just like their webcasts, 'How to' and 'Tips and Tricks' sessions.

    PTC offers, directly, and indirectly supports, more educational and training
    opportunities than any other corporation on earth. The user community lags
    pitifully behind; not much in the way of free, user developed tutorials and
    training resources available out there. I've heard of some university stuff; also,
    some stuff on websites, but most is out of date, scattered, fragmentary, partial
    elements of a comprehensive training program, and, of this, the community offers
    nothing.


    PTC/USER Email 'Exploder'

    http://www.ptcuser.org/exploder/index.html

    ProECentral has an active colllection of forums

    http://www.proecentral.com/portal/forum/default.asp

    Engineering Tips has a forum for each major CAD software, including Pro/e

    http://www.eng-tips.com/gthreadminder.cfm/lev2/22/lev3/70/pid/554

    http://www.mcaduser.com/

    Also called Pro/e User, this site is a collection of useful links plus a download
    site with, as are most, outdated files. Would be nice if they actually (whoever
    'they' are) tried to develop this thing. For example, they've got a list of sites
    called "Companies that use Pro/e". The list is lame: extremely partial and highly
    incomplete, missing big users in many areas. If they decided to be a little more
    active, open, and responsible, they'd enlist the help of actual Pro/e Users to
    correct their list so that it could be a valuable and reliable resource.

    http://www.caddigest.com/subjects/pro_engineer/tutorials_proe.htm

    http://www.synthx.com/tom/sy_tips.htm

    http://www.elite-consulting.com/pro_engineer hints tips tricks.htm

    http://www.3dlogix.com/3dlogix/3dlogix_tutorials_01_proetfiles.htm

    Here's one suggested by Michael Corbett; though it's not tutorials, it is
    resources
    www.cadregister.com Part of thomasregister.com has models as well.

    David Janes

    ===================================================

    Thanks for taking the time, David.

    A few more (maybe useful) links ...

    http:// ....
    www.caddigest.com/subjects/pro_engineer/tutorials_proe.htm
    www.staffs.ac.uk/~entdgc/WildfireDocs/tutorials.htm
    www.me.uvic.ca/~mech410/proe_tutorials.html
    www.cad-resources.com/index.html
    technology.calumet.purdue.edu/met/tickoo/faculty/proe/proe-wf/proe-wf.htm
    www.imakenews.com/ptcexpress/
    www.profilesmagazine.com/
    www.proefaq.com/


    Sheet Metal
    www.cod.edu/people/faculty/wielgos/shtml/cadd275.pdf

    Advanced Assy
    www.cod.edu/people/faculty/wielgos/adv_asm/index_273.htm

    www.cadquest.com/books/pdf/w2_draw_options.pdf

    www.ptc.com/for/education/college_list.htm

    =======================================================
     
    Jeff Howard, Nov 23, 2006
    #3
  3. David Janes

    Jeff Howard Guest

    < bump again >

    ==============================================

    For help with Pro/e, start with this. It's the user area of the PTC website which
    has several free introductory tutorials on WF & WF2:
    http://www.ptc.com/community/proewf2/newtools/index.htm

    The three listed below provide professional training courses on every function
    within Pro/e, including on Intralink PDM. All offer project-based, hands-on
    training. CADTRAIN is strictly CBT, everything online, downloadable training
    files, Camtasia based demos, onscreen tutorials with screen captured graphics.
    CADquest, on the other hand, is textbook based with downloadable training files.
    Those from CADTRAIN and CADquest are full, PTC-style courses and parallel PTC's
    course structure. Frotime, which also does CBT, has shorter, more partial tutorial
    style training. They're approaching course structure by offering several tutorials
    on the same functionality, such as Surfacing 1, 2, & 3 and Advanced Surfacing 1,
    2, & 3. With each costing around $15 and a Surfacing Subscription (6-8 tutorials)
    costing $60, they have pricing structure suited to invididuals who don't have
    corporate resources behind them. In addition, about one into course in each series
    is free.

    CADTRAIN
    http://www.cadtrain.com/
    CADquest
    http://www.cadquest.com/
    Frotime
    http://www.frotime.com/

    Community Colleges and Universities: PTC has an extensive network of schools that
    either train students in Pro/e software or use it to teach
    drafting/modelling/engineering/design. If you know of such a school, they likely
    have an Educational License which lets them offer any course taught by PTC. Here's
    a peek at the educational version and what it contains:
    http://www.ptc.com/appserver/mkt/educational/program.jsp?&im_dbkey=33880&icg_dbkey=851
    It has the advantage of spreading what would normally be a 40 hour sprint through
    a ton of new material over an 8-12 week period. Lot's more opportunity to get
    comfortable with the software and likely new concepts of design, lots more tube
    time and time to ask questions of an experienced user. It's where I got most of my
    formal training; I highly recommend it.

    Numerous books, one by Roger Toogood, another by L. G. Lamit and several
    specifically on sheetmetal with WF2. All available on Amazon for under $60, they
    provide a good, broad overview of working with WF2. All by professional writers
    and teachers. Lamit, for example, has been teaching Pro/e for over a decade at De
    Anza College, Cupertino CA (Silicon Valley) and has written several books on
    Pro/e. Toogood's authored most of the Student Edition Tutorials since I-squared at
    least. These guys know Pro/e.

    Student Edition from Journey Ed:
    http://proestudent.com/default.asp?action=selectLocation
    for $150, you get the Flex3C version of the software ($20,000 retail value), help
    files and one of the above books on CD with training files in SE format. Pro/e was
    the first, and for a while, the only major player in solids modelling, with a
    Student Edition of the program plus a longstanding, comprehensive training program
    accessible from the SE. On your own PC, with complete autonomy, you have full
    access to the entire power of Pro/ENGINEER design software. And most PCs, with a
    decent, OpenGL-compatible graphics card, can do the job.

    PTC University:
    http://www.ptc.com/learning
    Don't underestimate learning it straight "from the horses mouth". Don't know what
    it takes to sign up for this, probably a year's maintenance/support agreement,
    paid in advance. Still, if you've got it, this is a valuable resource: what you'd
    get in a class, no travel involved, all you need is a terminal with pro: complete,
    comprehensive, convenient. Sit at home and learn from PTC. I think this is
    extremely cool. Just like their webcasts, 'How to' and 'Tips and Tricks' sessions.

    PTC offers, directly, and indirectly supports, more educational and training
    opportunities than any other corporation on earth. The user community lags
    pitifully behind; not much in the way of free, user developed tutorials and
    training resources available out there. I've heard of some university stuff; also,
    some stuff on websites, but most is out of date, scattered, fragmentary, partial
    elements of a comprehensive training program, and, of this, the community offers
    nothing.


    PTC/USER Email 'Exploder'

    http://www.ptcuser.org/exploder/index.html

    ProECentral has an active colllection of forums

    http://www.proecentral.com/portal/forum/default.asp

    Engineering Tips has a forum for each major CAD software, including Pro/e

    http://www.eng-tips.com/gthreadminder.cfm/lev2/22/lev3/70/pid/554

    http://www.mcaduser.com/

    Also called Pro/e User, this site is a collection of useful links plus a download
    site with, as are most, outdated files. Would be nice if they actually (whoever
    'they' are) tried to develop this thing. For example, they've got a list of sites
    called "Companies that use Pro/e". The list is lame: extremely partial and highly
    incomplete, missing big users in many areas. If they decided to be a little more
    active, open, and responsible, they'd enlist the help of actual Pro/e Users to
    correct their list so that it could be a valuable and reliable resource.

    http://www.caddigest.com/subjects/pro_engineer/tutorials_proe.htm

    http://www.synthx.com/tom/sy_tips.htm

    http://www.elite-consulting.com/pro_engineer hints tips tricks.htm

    http://www.3dlogix.com/3dlogix/3dlogix_tutorials_01_proetfiles.htm

    Here's one suggested by Michael Corbett; though it's not tutorials, it is
    resources
    www.cadregister.com Part of thomasregister.com has models as well.

    David Janes

    ===================================================

    Thanks for taking the time, David.

    A few more (maybe useful) links ...

    http:// ....
    www.caddigest.com/subjects/pro_engineer/tutorials_proe.htm
    www.staffs.ac.uk/~entdgc/WildfireDocs/tutorials.htm
    www.me.uvic.ca/~mech410/proe_tutorials.html
    www.cad-resources.com/index.html
    technology.calumet.purdue.edu/met/tickoo/faculty/proe/proe-wf/proe-wf.htm
    www.imakenews.com/ptcexpress/
    www.profilesmagazine.com/
    www.proefaq.com/


    Sheet Metal
    www.cod.edu/people/faculty/wielgos/shtml/cadd275.pdf

    Advanced Assy
    www.cod.edu/people/faculty/wielgos/adv_asm/index_273.htm

    www.cadquest.com/books/pdf/w2_draw_options.pdf

    www.ptc.com/for/education/college_list.htm

    =======================================================
     
    Jeff Howard, Feb 27, 2007
    #4
Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments (here). After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.