Hello,
I started doing analysis usin high-end packages such as Nastran and LS-Dyna, IDEAS, etc. Only within the last few months have I started using PRO/Mech Structure.
I agree with some of the comments that PRO/M is more for designers versus full-time analysts. You see that when they push the integrated mode over the independent mode. I strongly disagree with the idea that you can do analysis in a fraction of the time with other software. This is especially true with more involved problems (e.g. modal analysis, frequency response, contact). I ran one linear static model (shell and volume elements) which took about 6 hours in PRO/Mech and it took 30 minutes in ABAQUS. My experience (and the group I work in) is that Mechanica is much slower than ABAQUS or NASTRAN.
Some specific complaints:
1. Modal solutions are very slow and create very large solutions. Ex. PRO/MEch: 9000 elements, 100 modes = 4.5 GB hard drvie space; NASTRAN 100,000 elements, 100 modes = 400 MB. Granted that PRO/Mech goes to 9th order polynomial, but 4.5 GB is ridiculous.
2. Crappy Shell mesh algorithm.
3. Very slow rendering of shaded models (i.e. switching from wireframe to shaded on large models.)
4. Crashing while creating Boundary conditions (don't reclick the arrow to pick more BCs).
5. You cannot exclude elements in dynamic response. So your max over entire structure can be thrown off over a single strss riser.
6. You cannot animate stress at a specific frequency.
7. You don't have control over the sample rate of a dynamic response. NASTRAN will give you about 10 different ways to specify modal frequency response sample rates.
8. Sticky nodes with contacts gives you very unrealistic high stresses.
9. Slow post processing. Example, changing the upper and lower range of contour plots, does it really need to regenerate all the open windows between twice?
10. Stress risers. I observed stress risers which make my results useless. the point of "Geometric" analysis is to remove the need to micro manage the mesh, but you have to do it any way.
11. You cannot import FE mesh from other solvers.
12. Limited surfacing capabilities (as compared to Hypermesh for example) in the independent mode.
13. You don't see the mesh in the integrated mode.
14. Linear only material. Much to my horror the PRO/Mech instructor of the intro class stated that if a part yields
its no good, so why would you need to do nonlinear analysis anyway?
15. In PRO/MECH structure you cannot query a points on an Xy plot. You have to dump it into EXCEL. C'mon this is graphing 101!
Etc, could make the list longer But I have to get back to work.
IN general PRO/Mech s good for simple analysis of simple parts. But if you are doing higher end stuff you probably want to use NASTRAN, ABAQUS, IDEAS (their 3rd party packages ESC, TMG, etc. are very good), LS-Dyna , and some others I haven't specifically worked with.
Hope this helps.