T
telecomguy
Member
Well, I've only got limited exposure to 3d design tools. Back in the mid-90s the company I was working for was using AutoCAD so when AutoDesk came out with AutoCAD 3D we tried it. That was very short lived and we quickly moved to ProE. This was a large company with lots of infrastructure and engineers. I left there about 4 yrs later and went to a small company where I was the only M.E. I got to choose my tool so after a demo of SolidWorks I was sold. Much easier to work with and ran on Windows (ProE was Unix-only at the time). After about 3 years there and the telecom-bust, I bought a personal seat of SolidWorks for doing contract design work. I quickly got on at another startup company but this time my boss preferred ProE so I was back on ProE and had to relearn it and remember why I didn't like it. It's a very powerful tool but with that power comes many limitations on how sketches, features, parts, and assemblies get all intertwined and one wrong move caused hours of resolve-mode. I've been on ProE ever since but still do contract work on SolidWorks. It seems like large companies lean ProE but for an individual the administration of a SolidWorks seat is very simple and seems to be a better fit.
I still prefer SolidWorks but ProE/Creo has made great strides attempting to emulate SolidWorks so it's getting much better. Lol
I still prefer SolidWorks but ProE/Creo has made great strides attempting to emulate SolidWorks so it's getting much better. Lol