![]() SW/SIM also seems to make analysis of mixed solid/sheet metal assemblies very easy, albeit with a suspicion of 'do I trust the result?'Īlso, while SW/SIM data-sharing is as seamless as Creo/Simulate, to keep every analysis-run for posterity, which Creo does automatically, requires you to Pack-and-Go, otherwise any design modifications mess up the last run giving you red and yellow warning symbols all over what you thought was a saved milestone in your development. ![]() SW/SIM calls them Blended Curvature-Based Mesh. ![]() I don't know about SIM Standard,but SIM Professional allows P-elements (which to me is the best thing about Creo/Simulate). SIM Premium adds Non-linear, Dynamic and Composites. (I think it allows more control over bolted friction than Creo/Sumulate standard licence, which is cynically crippled in that aspect). SIM Professional adds Contacts, Frequency (modal), Buckling, Drop test, pressure Vessel Design and ThermalĪnd you can simulate bolts, springs, welds, bearings. SIM Standard adds Fatigue (that's about all). SW Premium can do Linear FE (not used SW Premium on real jobs, so can't comment further). You'd gain very little for your money if you added SIM Standard to SW Professional.Īnd SIM Premium is expensive for the gain beyond Professional. Something akin to 'Creo Simulate Standard' functionality can be achieved with 'SW Standard plus SIM Professional'įor 'Advance licence Creo Simulate' functionality you'd need SW Standard plus SIM Premium. Solidworks (SW) professional has some FE function bundled within it.īeyond that Simulation (SIM) has three purchase options: SIM Standard (lowest), Professional and Premium (highest).
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