Whilst I agree with a lot of the above comments (this is an excellent thread btw), I couldn't help but pick up on what corus + others state about ANSYS.
> In general, generally speaking in a general manner, I'd think that ANSYS has greater mass market appeal, but fewer capabilities than those programs that are generally at the top end of the market which can, generally, tackle those harder probelms, if generally required to do so, generally.
> To that end, if ANSYS isn't at the top end of the market then, logically, it must generally appeal to the lower end of the market, in my opinion, generally.
I'd have to disagree with that very generalising statement regarding ANSYS' position in the market. Yes, ANSYS does have great mass market appeal, but in my view there are a couple of fundamental reasons for this: (1) its marketing strategy (2) its capability as a code/engineering tool. The marketing by ANSYS is very agressive, and they sell licences by the truck load, especially Workbench. Why does it sell so well? Because simply it is such an excellent engineering analysis tool that people enjoy and trust. Being a staunch ABAQUS man for many years (there are a few here too), I was "forced" to use ANSYS about 5 years ago, and admit I hated using it at first; it was tempramental, buggy and just didn't feel like you would ever get the hang of it. However, for me now there is no other tool I would choose to use. I've done so much linear and non-linear work with this code: seismic/shock (response spectrum/t-h), dynamic transient, modal, time-history, contact, plasticity: every time I use it, it's right on the money in terms of asking it to do what I want. It has everything: programming flexibility (APDL is amazing), functionality, high-end capabilities (user materials/elements, state of the art contact algorithms and element formulations...) the lot: just as ABAQUS does. Which brings me on to the second point. I don't believe that today's ANSYS code can be considered a low-end tool, not with the Multi-Physics/Mechanical environment. Absolutely not. A few years ago yes, I would've held my hands up to agree with you, and would've said ABAQUS beats it for high-end capability no problem. Things have changed now. ANSYS' non-linear capabilities are now up there with ABAQUS - I'm not saying they're better, because that's far too difficult to quantify, but in terms of putting them side-by-side and saying: "So what can each of these codes do?" there's not much between them nowadays. And, of course, something doesn't get mass market appeal in our industry because it's a low-end code, it becomes popular (in this context) because it works, and engineers/analysts/customers trust it. Engineers are such a critical bunch (!), in a dod-eat-dog business, and they don't use if they don't trust it.
There is a bit of disclaimer here though, and that is ANSYS Workbench. This needs some work (in fact, it needs lots of work), and probably falls into the category described by corus above. Fair comment.
I'd be interested to know whether the people who've given negative remarks about ANSYS have ever used ANSYS previously for any length of time?
Cheers,
-- drej --
btw: Congratulations to the boys at Liverpool FC: European Champions!! Well done.
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