ludvik
Structural
- Aug 6, 2001
- 75
I work for a firm of consulting structural engineers, and we are currently a little fustrated with the software we use for structural analysis (we design bridges mostly).
We use LARSA, SAP2000, and ADINA. LARSA's non-linear time history (ie transient analysis) doesn't work at all. Additionally its interface is clunky. SAP2000's has non-linear time history, but doesn't handle non-linear material properties and only handles basic geometric non-linearity effects (P-delta to be specific). ADINA has a very hard core solver, but its interface is completely hopeless.
I have looked into ANSYS which has both a good solver and a good interface. The problem is that it is too expensive. ANSYS/Structural costs US$23000 per license. Possibly a manufacturer could justify this kind of expense for an analysis package, but we consulting engineers can't.
Hope to hear about your experiences and thoughts on this.
Michael
We use LARSA, SAP2000, and ADINA. LARSA's non-linear time history (ie transient analysis) doesn't work at all. Additionally its interface is clunky. SAP2000's has non-linear time history, but doesn't handle non-linear material properties and only handles basic geometric non-linearity effects (P-delta to be specific). ADINA has a very hard core solver, but its interface is completely hopeless.
I have looked into ANSYS which has both a good solver and a good interface. The problem is that it is too expensive. ANSYS/Structural costs US$23000 per license. Possibly a manufacturer could justify this kind of expense for an analysis package, but we consulting engineers can't.
Hope to hear about your experiences and thoughts on this.
Michael