Good morning hunter,
a part of the post goes, evaluates whether to remove the part and, perhaps, transfer it to another area.
your opinion is a daughter of our knowledge and experience. being the owner or manager of Italian company, you will have all the good reasons and experience to adopt this way of proceeding.
Back to topic, give the options:
1) I learn well inventor
2) I learn solidworks
3) I make a basic training on one of two randomly and spend the rest of time on machine tool books, mechanical technology, mechanical design
I would definitely recommend the 3.
back to topic: both yebisu and drop required which software to choose between inventor and solidworks. not if studying on a book related to stamping or welding.
my answer:
1) depends on what you want to do (product, equipment, sheet, plastic, etc.) and where ( geographical area, type of companies, etc.? ).
If, by hypothesis, behind the house, drop or yebisu have an induced of companies that use inventor to make automatic machines, why not? even if the sector is concentrated on other cads, as could be solidworks or solidedge, it does not mean that you cannot acquire knowledge also with other software.
then, in accordance with the theme of choice between inventor and solidworks:
... I didn't say you should know how a bumper is made, but something about the retreats, the fittings, the blows you need
know... .
If you read my post, I said that for those who make wheel envelopes it is not said that it is necessary to know how a bumper is made, not that those who make bumpers should not know how to make a bumper.
... according to my experience, even the simple designer are always and anyway required knowledge of technological processes,
That's how you can build the piece you're drawing... .
Again. I did not say that a person without any kind of education or training can do any kind of job from today to tomorrow.
I said that once a basic training is defined (that, for example, drop as an engineering student, when he comes out, he should have) he will have to focus on acquiring a professionalism that, not always, is acquired with a reading of a book. sometimes it takes years next to people with so much experience. class a, gears, bumpers, nx, catia, inventor, pro-e, sheet metal molds, plastic molds, etc.
that professionalism will be recognized, especially in large companies and abroad.
and it is not said that having 10 years of experience in aircraft, may be of interest to those who make cars. even if you have a master's degree.
... I have seen drawings made with catia (beautiful) but on which impossible mechanical processing was indicated, type in areas
unattainable by the mill.
After a few years I realized that, of course, there is very little in the sector.
when there is time and money, (almost) everything you can do.
Perhaps a technological process "impossible" for an Italian company, is possible for a German company.
a "impossible" for a producer of "series", it is possible for one of niche.
what is "impossible" with a 50k euro mold, it is possible with one from 100k.
"impossible" tolerance for your trusted supplier, you can for a new one just came out on the market.
then, for the series "I saw things that you humans...":
I have seen geometries and artistic graduates learn to design and design plastic details in an absolutely authoritative way.
I have seen estimated professionals in the equipment industry approach the study of a product as they were the same thing.
I have seen engineers, with a flower of collaborations, who have sent up the release of a product because, among other things, " .. yes but so solidedge does the aesthetic connection and you can see nothing..." and other information about the molding that, to the reality of the facts, turned out wrong.
It's always hard to judge others' work. especially if, in the middle, there are n passages and more n tends to infinite, more information that come to us is partial and "of part".
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