IIT Student Asks: What CAD Software Should I Use?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers around CAD software relevant to mechanical engineering, particularly for a sophomore student at the Indian Institute of Technology. The student is exploring options for design software, having not yet started formal CAD courses. They plan to attend workshops on ANSYS and SolidWorks and seek guidance on which software to focus on for designing mechanical projects, such as an RC plane with a camera. Key points highlight that SolidWorks and ProEngineer dominate the market, with ongoing debates about their superiority. CATIA is noted as a high-end option, typically used by major aerospace companies, while AutoCAD Inventor is mentioned as a more affordable choice, offering a 3D parametric version of traditional CAD. The discussion emphasizes that while the core concepts of sketching and constraints are similar across these platforms, user interfaces differ significantly.
nradam
Messages
9
Reaction score
0
I am a sophomore student in Indian Institute Of Technology, doing mechanical engineering (Just introducing myself as this is my first post in this super-mesmerizing website)

Well, we haven't yet started any CAD courses in college, and i will have to bunk a few classes tomorrow to attend a workshop on ANSYS. A week later, there is a workshop on solidworks. And for a long while I've only heard of this software called autocad.

So i was wondering, what are all these softwares about? Which one should i concentrate on so that i can start designing some mechanical stuff? I can already do some pretty good coding for embedded systems, so let's say if i want to design an RC plane (mounted with a camera would be cool) which is the best software i can use for that purpose?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
SolidWorks will give you a lot of fun.
 
Oh, thanks for the reply.
I would like to get some more feedbacks tho.
 
CATIA = biggest player. Somewhat expensive ie. unlikely to be using it unless it says Boeing or Airbus on your ID badge,

ProEngineer/Solidworks = majority of the market. People argue endlessly about which is best which implies they are identical.

Autocad Inventor = probably cheapest (still a few $1000), 3D parametric version of the traditional favorite PC cad app.

The important concepts, sketching/constraints are pretty much identical, the user interface is vastly different between each.
 
Back
Top