SolidWorks for 2D only?

Discussion in 'SolidWorks' started by Brian Mears, Jan 23, 2004.

  1. Brian Mears

    Brian Mears Guest

    Does anybody here use SolidWorks for 2D only?

    One part of our engineering group works with temporary materials
    (cardboard, sheet plastics) and currently uses a program called
    Artios, which is geared toward that. Artios however is very poor as a
    CAD program, and they plan to switch to something that will work much
    better for them. Right now that plan is AutoCAD, but the rest of the
    engineering group will use SolidWorks. I'm thinking that they may
    also be able to use SolidWorks, but only for 2D. Any reason why that
    wouldn't work? Is there something that would make it very difficult
    to do? Any and all feedback is appreciated.

    Note that I've left out several details in the description above...
    there's more to it, and more reasons for switching, but the basic
    question is the feasibility of SW for 2D work. Thanks...

    Brian
     
    Brian Mears, Jan 23, 2004
    #1
  2. Brian Mears

    Jeff N Guest

    SolidWorks and AutoCAD are pretty compatible. I would leave the 2D work with
    AutoCAD, as that is what it is mainly designed to do, and leave 3D to
    SolidWorks, as that is what it is mainly designed to do.
    When stuff would need to be 3D'd you can simply open the 2D layout directly
    in SolidWorks and go from there.
     
    Jeff N, Jan 23, 2004
    #2
  3. I concur.

     
    Corey Scheich, Jan 23, 2004
    #3
  4. Brian Mears

    Sporkman Guest

    There are kinds of 2D work that I've done in the past which wouldn't be
    very compatible with SolidWorks. Actually even AutoCAD isn't perfectly
    suited for it either, although it's workable. That work I'm talking
    about is design of labels and overlays. If that's the kind of stuff
    they're into I might suggest to think about CorelDraw or Adobe
    Illustrator. You can create better stuff, get EPS and Postscript output
    (which is often important to labelmakers) and also output DXF (from
    CorelDraw, I know, but I'd have to check whether that's an option with
    Illustrator).

    Otherwise, if the work doesn't include labels and such but really needs
    to be 2D only AND is unlikely to lead to 3D parts then BOTH SolidWorks
    and AutoCAD are WAY overkill in terms of cost. You can have IntelliCAD
    for free, and TurboCAD for almost free. Those are both plenty powerful,
    and they output DWG and DXF (actually IntelliCAD's native format is
    DWG). There are others as well. The only reason I could see for
    keeping AutoCAD 2D is to accept files from other companies in DWG or DXF
    format, and for that all you need do is maintain ONE seat. And you
    don't even NEED to do that (there are translators available).

    Mark 'Sporky' Stapleton
    Charlotte, NC
     
    Sporkman, Jan 23, 2004
    #4
  5. Brian Mears

    Ron Smith Guest

    I used to use a program called Interact, which later became LaserPoint, then
    became ArtiosCAD. ArtiosCAD has a built in macro language that allows you
    to customize it. I have to disagree with you regarding ArtiosCAD as being a
    bad CAD program. It has been around for about 23 years, and might be
    considered the standard CAD program for packaging design. It has a built in
    macro language, and it is easily customizable. The nice thing about
    ArtiosCAD is that the program is a combination CAD/CAM program. Most users
    aren't aware of this, but it started off as a CAD program specifically for
    steel rule die manufacturing. You have complete control of the order of
    entities and line direction in the database.

    AutoCAD doesn't allow you to do this. There are some workarounds, but
    AutoCAD out of the box has virtually no CAM functionality. Ashlar Score is
    probably ArtiosCAD's biggest competitor. It is Ashlar Vellum that was
    customized for packaging design. Started out on Mac's, and has been on PC's
    for quite awhile. www.discore.com - now goes by the name of Score! CAD.
    I have never used it, but know a lot of people that do.

    They also have a new program called Score! X - http://www.score-x.com/ - I
    have messed with it, but it is not really a CAD program. It has a bunch of
    packaging standards, you key in length, width, and depth, and create designs
    you can export to CAD for further work.

    The problem with designing in 3D for packaging design is that the end result
    for manufacturing is a flat pattern. It is probably because I am old
    school, but it seems easier for me to design flat, and then test my folds.
    That is assuming you know the basics of packaging design styles and
    corresponding material thicknesses, and have access to a corrugated and
    folding carton samplemaking table.
    http://www.data-technology.com/dt2200.html is the one I use.

    I am also an experienced AutoCAD user. After using dedicated packaging
    design CAD programs for 15 years, I would never go back to designing
    packaging in AutoCAD. It is basically an exercise in futility. I can tell
    you from experience that it is much more time consuming.

    It didn't get any better in AutoCAD 2000. I have also used IntelliCAD, and
    am an intermediate Adobe Illustrator user. Same goes for them. Good
    programs, but not for efficient packaging design. Illustrator doesn't
    allways translate back into CAD in a clean manner if the end result needs to
    be used in manufacturing (like running a laser).

    I have tried doing some packaging design in Autodesk Inventor, but was
    pretty frustrated. Some was my lack of experience, but the sheet metal
    functionality isn't exactly tailored for packaging design. I have also read
    your earlier thread, and it appears others have experienced problems using
    SolidWorks for 3D packaging deisgn. I am suprised that nobody has created
    add ons to SolidEdge, SolidWorks, or Inventor for packaging design. It is a
    somewhat limited market, but if you look at it in terms of global use, it
    appears there is enough of a market for it.

    My suggestion to you would be to gain a better understanding of ArtiosCAD,
    and its macro language. A lot of times, it is a manner of cleaning up the
    data in ArtiosCAD before it is exported, such as removing 0 length lines,
    making sure arcs are tangent to line segments when they are supposed to be,
    removing overlapping lines, eliminating gaps between line segments, etc.

    Let us know your other reasons for dumping ArtiosCAD. You wouldn't be the
    first :) And, if you find a 3D solution that works great, let me know.
     
    Ron Smith, Jan 24, 2004
    #5
  6. Brian Mears

    Brian Mears Guest

    I'm speaking on behalf of the Artios guys here, so I might be just a little
    off base, but from what I see, the major problem with ArtriosCAD is
    documentation. You can't easily create drawings and add/change textual
    information. Printing is supposedly a nightmare. They're trying to mimic
    our AutoCAD attributes with little success. We need to export data into an
    ERP system, and ArtiosCAD can't do it... that's from their tech.

    We use ArtiosCAD for packaging design, but it's primary use is temporary
    store displays, which are often VERY complex. Most of those are designed
    flat in 2D in Artios from scratch, sent to the plotter table (Kongsberg),
    and tested. You could do the exact same thing from AutoCAD or any 2D CAD
    system, with the added benefit of being able to document it all easily.

    Don't get me wrong... I (we) do NOT feel that ArtiosCAD is a bad CAD
    system... it is in fact excellent at what it's designed to do... package
    design. We will never dump it, as we will continue to have a use for it.

    I have determined that Mechanical Desktop/SolidWorks/Inventor are not
    suitable for packaging or temporary material design. The subtle (?)
    differences in sheet metal vs. cardboard design are enough to make it too
    difficult to be productive. I'm also suprised that we haven't seen some
    type of add-on yet. I'd be all over that.

    Thanks for your post... it sounds like you've followed many of the same
    steps that I have. Please let me know if you have any other
    comments/questions, and I'll let you know if I find anything new...

    Brian
     
    Brian Mears, Jan 24, 2004
    #6
  7. Brian Mears

    Ron Smith Guest

    I also design some corrugated point of purchase displays. I am also
    assuming that your ArtiosCAD users have never written any programs with the
    built in macro language. In actuality, every saved ArtiosCAD file (ARD
    extension) is a compiled macro. Every entity in the ArtiosCAD database can
    have variables associated with it. It doesn't mean they do, but they can if
    you associate one to them.

    Basically, like:

    A$ = 'Sample'
    L = 5

    These variables are then saved in the file. The entire ArtiosCAD interface
    for the most part is written in the macro programming language. The CAD
    engine for ArtiosCAD (behind the scenes) is the same as it was when I
    started using Interact ("no menu ArtiosCAD") in 1985. When I was evaluating
    new packaging CAD sysyems one year ago, I had the ArtiosCAD rep come in, and
    he let me look at the program from the "command line". It didn't look
    much different from when I quit using Interact 10 years ago.

    Most ArtiosCAD users have no idea a command line exists, much like new users
    of AutoCAD probably never use the command line, and wonder what the words
    "Command:" means in the lower left hand of the screen.

    The macro language has complete control over the variables, and the
    entitites. The key is to have each piece of text a distinct variable.

    As far as your "tech" telling you that you can't export data into an ERP
    system, that is simply untrue. I recently worked 2 1/2 years for an ERP
    company, and we would have had no problem reading an intermediate CDF (comma
    deliminated file) from ArtiosCAD. I was hired to help them be able to do it
    in AutoCAD.

    AutoCAD users can create Bill of Material information many different ways
    ie.text, attributes. and AutoCAD 2000 (specifically AutoCAD mechanical) has
    the BOM that extracts directly to a Microsoft Access database. AutoCAD 2000
    also has dbConnect, which I was able to have complete access to our ERP
    system from within AutoCAD. The point I am trying to make is the data that
    is held inside ArtiosCAD can be extracted, and manipulated pretty easily if
    you know how to do it. There is a user group for ArtiosCAD -
    http://www.augi.org/ They might be able to help you.

    I agree that the printing of ArtiosCAD drawings (using their pre-defined
    forms) can be a nightmare. A good example of the power of the ArtiosCAD
    macro programming language - the head CAD person at one of the largest
    packaging companies in the world wrote their entire interface in it. All of
    his users were trained in this interface, regarding designing / creating /
    printing drawings. All of the variable information contained in his users
    files (the variables he created) is standard throughout his user base.
     
    Ron Smith, Jan 24, 2004
    #7
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