Autodesk, Inc. (San Rafael, CA) has a bundle for computer- aided design (CAD)
professionals: the Autodesk Inventor Series, which includes AutoCAD 2004 (2D CAD),
AutoCAD Mechanical Desktop 2004 (basically AutoCAD with a major mechanical bent),
and Autodesk Inventor 7 (3D, adaptive solids modeler). With this bundle, users
can migrate from 2D drafting to 3D solids modelingeasily and without losing
2D design data.
Such a hybrid design environment is possible through Inventors 3D modeling
kernel, the Autodesk ShapeManager. The kernel lets you work in both surface
and solids design environments, and switch between the two on-the-fly, as well
as mix surfaces and solids to create stylized and complex parts. This opens
up traditional surface-only construction commands for 3D pros, such as loft
with rails, replace surface, surface knitting, surface offset, and surface thickening.
In Inventor 7, ShapeManager also lets you create trimmed surfaces, and split
surfaces with other surfaces, part faces, or sketch geometry.
The Inventor 7 user interface is also new. Similarities in design and operation
to Microsoft XP are not coincidental. In addition, the solid modeler takes advantage
of XP Professionals new ability to access up to 3 GB of system memory,
which lets you work with larger assemblies. To better handle larger assemblies,
Inventor can display only the relevant components. For example, you can place
an engine onto the chassis and tell Inventor youre only interested in
the engine block, versus the other internal information (such as connecting
rods, lifters, and cams). Views can be quickly switched and turned on and off.
This decreases the amount of memory required to assembly the models.
Inventors user interface also includes gesture-based interactivity.
This is a neat feature where the CAD package responds to cursor movements, such
as opening dialog boxes or completing design elements based on how you move
the mouse. Moreover, Inventors help system has become browser-based, something
many consumer-based software packages provide. That said, theres still
a 360-page Getting Started manual for us gearheads who like to nuzzle
up to documentation not requiring electricity.
Inventor easily imports AutoCADs DWG files and reproduces AutoCAD drawings,
while maintaining the intelligence of the 2D design data. During import, you
can preview the DWG file selected for translation, custom import and export
of AutoCAD layers, and convert AutoCAD layers into title blocks, borders, symbols,
or new 3D designs. You can also add intelligence to your DWG data,
such as 2D parametrics, use existing 2D data in the context of a 3D assembly
for conceptual design (adaptive layout), and use 2D data to create new 3D models.
The same holds true for importing design files created in Autodesk Mechanical
Desktop. Conversely, you can create AutoCAD DWG files in Inventor.
By the way, AutoCADs new DWG file format creates files up to 50% smaller
than previous DWG files. The revised format supports true color (16.1 million
colors) and higher resolutions. However, while AutoCAD 2004 can save a file
in a previous versions format back to R2000, it cannot save a file to
AutoCADs R14 format, the last major release of AutoCAD before AutoCAD
2002.
Back to Inventor 7. It can import and export both STEP and IGES file formats,
it supports Autodesks own DWG and DXF, and it supports STL (stereolithography),
SAT (ACIS), Autodesk VIZ, and, for output only, 3ds max.
|
In the past, users often turned to mid-market CAD packages, versus
say Unigraphics, I-DEAS, and CATIA, because they didnt have a lot of cash.
Now theyre turning to the mid-market packages like Inventor explicitly
for the feature/functionality that those packages providefeature/functionality
typically found in the higher-priced competition. The Autodesk Inventor Series
costs $5,195/license. That price does not equal $4,195/license for AutoCAD Mechanical
2004 plus $3,750/license for AutoCAD 2004. Something is coming free: The ability
to move between 2D and 3D.
|
Theres one more file format that Inventor 7 supports: DWF (Design Web
Format). DWF is akin to Adobe PDF in that users can distribute documents securely;
DWF files are lightweight, non-editable, and well-suited for sending and viewing
AutoCAD drawings over the Web. The latest version of DWF can be viewed and printed
with Autodesk Express Viewer (included with Inventor or as a 2-MB download).
This free viewer replaces the free Volo View Express, which could also view
DWG, DXF, and Inventor formats (25-MB download). Besides being a new publishing
format compatible with all Autodesk products, DWF capabilities include multiple
2D sheets, password support, and print-ready format.
Inventor 7s system requirements for advanced assembly modeling
(more than 1,000 parts) are a Pentium IV, Xeon, or AMD Athlon 1.8-GHz processor
or better, 600 MB hard drive space, 1 GB of temp space, more than
1 GB RAM and 2.5 GB virtual memory space, and a 64-MB (or greater) OpenGL-capable
graphics card. For smaller assemblies, you can get by with a 1-GHz processor
and a 32-MB graphics card. Another requirement: Inventor only works on Windows
XP (SP1 or later), 2000 Professional (SP2 or later), and NT 4.0 (SP6a or later).
The Autodesk Inventor Series is considered one package. Once installed, Autodesk
Inventor 7 and Autodesk Mechanical Desktop 2004 can then be used concurrently
or separately on that same machine. Network users can install both products,
but they have a limit to the number of simultaneous users. However, new to this
version, Autodesk lets you borrow Inventor licenses. FLEXlm 8.3
(those lower-case letters suggest license management) lets you check
out a network license for a limited time, and then return that license
to the server when you reconnect, time out, or release the license. You can
temporarily work without a connection to the license server.