eric316
Mechanical
- Jun 30, 2004
- 7
Hi,
We currently use SolidWorks and our products often consist of weldments upon which detailed FEA analysis must be run. SW has a weld bead feature that allows you to select adjacent surfaces of two parts in an assembly and it will automatically create a weld bead. Although this weld bead wizard has options for selecting just about every weld you can imagine, the only one that I could get to work is a simple fillet weld. This is fine for most of the stuff we do.
I know that Solid Edge also has a weldment feature and I have seen it demonstrated. From what I remember, instead of selecting two adjacent surfaces of two parts in an assembly you can just select the edge (line) formed where these two parts meet, correct? In SW, you can only create weld beads between two parts at a time. What is it like in SE? Can you select several edges and follow them around multiple parts to create a more complex, continuous weld bead? Can SE only do fillets to or can it do other types of welds?
Question number two. In order to create our detailed FEA's I often need to create these individual weld beads in SW and then create a "joined part" so that I now have a single, complex, lattice-like, weld bead. Then I suppress all the individual beads that I used to create this joined part. Then I check the assembly for interferences because the FEA cannot have interferences. Often times, I need to make oblique cuts in the corners of some of the plates to clear a fillet weld that is passing through the area. Check for interferences again, etc... As you can imagine, setting up these assemblies for FEA can be a very tedious process. However, it does result in a more accurate analysis of what's really going on.
Whew!!! So my question is...knowing how we prepare assemblies for FEA, can Solid Edge do it faster/easier??? Please say yes! If so, how??? Please be detailed. I would like to understand the weldment module of Solid Edge much better. I guess I'm just hoping there is something out there that can make my job a little easier.
We currently use SolidWorks and our products often consist of weldments upon which detailed FEA analysis must be run. SW has a weld bead feature that allows you to select adjacent surfaces of two parts in an assembly and it will automatically create a weld bead. Although this weld bead wizard has options for selecting just about every weld you can imagine, the only one that I could get to work is a simple fillet weld. This is fine for most of the stuff we do.
I know that Solid Edge also has a weldment feature and I have seen it demonstrated. From what I remember, instead of selecting two adjacent surfaces of two parts in an assembly you can just select the edge (line) formed where these two parts meet, correct? In SW, you can only create weld beads between two parts at a time. What is it like in SE? Can you select several edges and follow them around multiple parts to create a more complex, continuous weld bead? Can SE only do fillets to or can it do other types of welds?
Question number two. In order to create our detailed FEA's I often need to create these individual weld beads in SW and then create a "joined part" so that I now have a single, complex, lattice-like, weld bead. Then I suppress all the individual beads that I used to create this joined part. Then I check the assembly for interferences because the FEA cannot have interferences. Often times, I need to make oblique cuts in the corners of some of the plates to clear a fillet weld that is passing through the area. Check for interferences again, etc... As you can imagine, setting up these assemblies for FEA can be a very tedious process. However, it does result in a more accurate analysis of what's really going on.
Whew!!! So my question is...knowing how we prepare assemblies for FEA, can Solid Edge do it faster/easier??? Please say yes! If so, how??? Please be detailed. I would like to understand the weldment module of Solid Edge much better. I guess I'm just hoping there is something out there that can make my job a little easier.