At our location (at the time I was working for a diversified British manufacturing company at their American division in Saginaw, MI) we started out with 3 stations, one for Food Machinery (where I worked), one for Chemical Machinery and one for Manufacturing (they were actually responisble for the day-to-day operation of the system). All told, we had perhaps 150 engineers, designers, draftsmen, NC programmers working for our company at the time who potentially could have benefited from using the system although we started out with just 6 people going to training in California.
In the next 3 years (I left the company to join the UG organization in 1980) we expanded the original system to 6 stations and added a second system (in those days you had a central CPU with serially connected terminals) which had 5 stations for a total of 11 at our facility (in the UK they had another 4 systems at various locations with something like 32 stations, making our corporation at the time the largest user of Unigraphics in the world).
As for the number of people using the system, those of us who used it on a regular basis worked one of two shifts and all told I think we had trained maybe 25 or 26 people total at the Saginaw location. Of that number, maybe 5 of us would be what you would call an Engineer (degreed or with your PE, which I was both), something like 5 NC programmers and the rest designers and draftsmen.
As you can imagine, we felt like pioneers, but it was a great experience and of course this led to my changing my career direction since, as they say, I had a chance to 'get in at ground floor' and decided to move from the user to the provider side of the equation and I've never looked back.
John R. Baker, P.E.
Product 'Evangelist'
Product Design Solutions
Siemens PLM Software Inc.
Industry Sector
Cypress, CA
To an Engineer, the glass is twice as big as it needs to be.