Speaking from a position of 'ignorance', at least with respect to the engineering of what I assume are architectural 'structures' (although some of the machines I've worked on were as big as a small house), I assume that when someone like
JedClampett says CAD, you're taking almost strictly about the production of Drawings, either as part a response to a RFQ (Request For Quotation) or for fabricating the parts that are going to a job site as well as the 'erection' drawings for the actual job site. Am I correct? If so, I can understand how there might confusion when asking a mixed audience a question like was posed by the OP. In the 'discrete manufacturing' industry, as I've already allude in an earlier post, if anyone even proposed using a change in the "CAD platform" as an opportunity to keep the Engineers from doing their own CAD work, there would have been a mutiny, at least in all the organizations that I'm familiar with. It amazing how this almost ubiquitous tool, CAD, has evolved along such different lines. And speaking of 'Electrical Engineers', or to be more specific 'Electronic Engineers', from the experiences that I've had with them (and being that I started Engineering school as a EE), it would be nearly impossible for them to do their jobs without the benefit of CAD systems designed for their specific use, since for them, the CAD models are their 'work output', and in many respects, this fast becoming the case in the 'discrete manufacturing' world as well with the advent of integrated CAE and CAM as well as other applications such as visualization and rendering.
Anyway, I'm glad I'm where CAD is considered an 'Engineering' tool and not just a means of producing 'paper', not that our industry never experienced a 'phase' like that, just that it started to end about 25 years ago with the introduction of more powerful computers and advanced software tools which made the development and usage of interactive 3D solid modeling both practical and efficient.
John R. Baker, P.E.
Product 'Evangelist'
Product Engineering Software
Siemens PLM Software Inc.
Industry Sector
Cypress, CA
Siemens PLM:
UG/NX Museum:
To an Engineer, the glass is twice as big as it needs to be.