CraigJ wrote: "if you want the best code use Ansys"
I am sorry Craig, but that is your opinion. I have also used all the codes that you listed and I have found COSMOS to be a very good solution for me. I did my research on SRAC, the company who develops COSMOS, before investing in them and I found they have been around since 1982, so they have a lot of experience in FEA software as well. Now that they are owned by SolidWorks, they have a lot more backing to innovate and develop their software. I am looking forward to future advances coming out of COSMOS.
CraigJ wrote: "With Ansys you get the peice of mind that if there ever comes a time when you need to add more capibility the sky is pretty much the limit"
COSMOS also has a high-end code called COSMOSM, which is very similar to Ansys Professional, that I use in addition to DesignSTAR. I can do dynamic analysis with this software as well. The database that I create in DesignSTAR can be recreated in COSMOSM by a simple export, where I don't think Ansys can do that with their DesignSpace to Professional codes. I can easily set up the problem in DesignSTAR and then recreate it in COSMOSM and then make the few necessary changes before running the analysis. One reason to use COSMOSDesignSTAR is that I can do non-linear analysis in this interface, whereas Ansys DesignSpace cannot.
"If for nothing else Ansys mesher is worth the extra couple thousand dollars"
I do not concur. There is no mesher that is a no-brainer point-and-click. As a conscientious analyst, I must interrogate my mesh before I am comfortable with the results it produces, no matter what mesher I use. COSMOS gives me the tools I need to do this interrogation of aspect ratio, Jacobian, element size and compatibility. Ansys I believe has similar tools, so you cannot really say one is better than the other. Rather it depends on how the user works with the tools available in the software. I would argue that perhaps you didn't investigate more deeply into the meshing tools in COSMOS. The auto-mesher in COSMOS makes it seem too simple, I agree, but that's not all that is there- it goes deeper. In my experience, I found it also to be much faster and more robust than the mesher in Ansys.
So to summarize, I feel that both Ansys and COSMOS are both very good FEA codes. I found that I can do everything I need (from static linear to non-linear, to dynamic, post-dynamic, fatigue, thermal, thermal stress, contact, electro-magnetics, fluid flow, and more), I can do with COSMOS products, plus at a much more affordable price than Ansys. Without COSMOS, I wouldn't be able to use a FEA code because I cannot afford Ansys, and I don't feel I lose anything by using COSMOS instead of Ansys. This is just my opinion and I think they everyone has a right to their opinion, but I feel that it should be created themselves. Obviously, the person who started this thread concluded that COSMOS was not for him, and my original question was along the lines of why he came to this opinion. It probably was because he has a background with Ansys already, but I wanted see what he had to say about it in more detail the reasons why "COSMOS is out of the race."
As far as Algor, I used it many years ago (about 1997-8) and I didn't like it at all. Whatever I hear about it now comes from another source, and usually it is not pretty what they are saying. Last thing I heard was the other day that their tech support is really bad. The response from Algor that this person got was: Didn't you read the manual?