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Brad Strong
Brad Strong
Brad Strong is a CAD industry veteran with over 20 years of experience. Experience includes CAD systems such as Pro/Engineer, AutoCAD, SOLIDWORKS, Inventor, as well as the Unity and Unreal game engines. He has worked as an MCAD AE for Autodesk, Inc., as an NC programmer for Roll-Royce Marine in … More »

MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – Transmagic

 
January 14th, 2019 by Brad Strong

CAD Visualization Technologies Drastically Increase in 2019

The rise of game engines as engineering & design tools

Game engines will play a larger role in the design and visualization of manufactured products. Game engines like Unity and Unreal Engine are already making inroads to bring CAD data into the engine where advanced lighting, materials, cameras and scripted mechanics can simulate real-world environments. Real-time rendering enables huge time savings over traditional visualization and rendering processes, and allows the user experience to go virtual.

Increase in virtual product prototyping

Virtual prototyping is in many cases displacing processes of the past which required large, expensive models of cars, jets and even submarines to optimize product design. Virtual prototyping allows designers to visualize, walk around and even operate virtual models, giving them a multitude of tools to inspect and measure every square inch of the new design. Moreover, the design can be iterated as quickly as virtual components can be replaced. Generally speaking, the more iterations the design passes through, the better the design will be. Virtual prototyping promises lower development costs, increased optimization, and even the ability to market products before the expense of manufacturing is undertaken.

Read the rest of MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – Transmagic

MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – C3D Labs

 
January 13th, 2019 by Oleg Zykov

The advance of Industry 4.0 is encouraging new companies to enter the engineering software market to create new products that engage digital twins, connecting them to the material world. New players, as a rule, dedicate themselves to niches in which they possess the greatest competence and best strategic vision. Among the niches we are seeing are in the areas of generative design programs, collaboration tools, and additive manufacturing preprocessing software. In 2019, we will hear about even more of them, but will also witness more takeovers by the giants. Recall the recent acquisition of Frustum, a star of the new wave, by PTC.

Newcomers to the CAD community are impacting the mature market of software components – geometric kernels, data exchange tools, visualization engines, and so on – because they are looking for affordable components that integrate into their projects extremely quickly. In our digital era, go-to-market time is not measured in years, but in months and even weeks. Fortunately, the choice in geometric kernel now goes beyond ACIS or Parasolid. To provide functions such as geometric modeling, constraint solving, file conversion, and visualization, CAD software development firms can choose from the venerable CGM by Dassault Systemes, the completely new Kosmos kernel by Kubotek, and C3D Toolkit by C3D Labs.

Read the rest of MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – C3D Labs

MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – Onshape

 
January 12th, 2019 by John McEleney

  1. Security and compliance issues will become an even bigger priority in 2019. With major data and privacy leaks seemingly happening every other week, more companies will follow IBM’s lead and ban employees from using portable USB or flash drives. A decade ago, very few companies had Chief Security Officers — the job title barely existed. Now companies will have to adopt some kind of agile security model to handle emerging threats.

  2. As technology platforms for CAD systems continue to evolve, look for the first Augmented Reality CAD application in 2019 that is not just a viewer, but a brand new design platform where life-size 3D models can be created and edited in an engineer’s physical surroundings without a screen. Whether AR will transform the CAD world or just become a novelty is yet to be determined, but the technology is coming soon.

  3. It will be inevitable that CPQ systems – configure price quote systems – will start to be adopted on a mainstream basis. Companies are demanding a better and faster way for their sales teams to help customers configure products to their specifications – and make sure that those configurations are manufacturable.

  4. Mobile phone and robotics technology will continue to drive huge innovations in medical device design in the same way that the space program spun off new technologies that impacted multiple industries.

Read the rest of MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – Onshape

MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – MasterCAM

 
January 11th, 2019 by Ben Mund

The global manufacturing business climate remains very encouraging. Based on our observations, we were expecting that the manufacturing sector would be a little stronger in the first half of 2018 than in the second. This played out as expected until the very end of 2018 when we saw a significant spike in multiple manufacturing sectors. That strong year-end growth has also driven an excellent beginning to 2019.

Manufacturing in the U.S. continues to strengthen, and general global manufacturing growth continues into this year with some extremely exciting hotspots. We’re expecting additional growth in the aerospace sector, as well as rapid expansion of machines and software that encourages fast, efficient machining with fewer setups. Multitasking centers and advanced multiaxis machines are two examples that we expect will become even more popular throughout the year.

It’s also interesting to take a step back and look at the manufacturing output for the last decade. We saw the beginnings of a steep decline in 2008 and hit and alarming valley in early 2009, with the financial crisis in full swing. Manufacturing, and everything that supplies it, took an enormous dip. Since the end of 2009 until today, however, we’ve seen slow, steady growth in manufacturing output. This pattern of growth has brought machine tool manufacturers, software suppliers, shops, and machinists along with it. It’s exciting that everyone – us, you, your readers – all can benefit as part of an industry that’s proven to be the backbone of economic recovery.

MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – RIZE Inc.

 
January 11th, 2019 by Andy Kalambi

Execution will be paramount in 2019. Many 3D printing companies are bubbling with innovation, but some of those companies will not make it; that is the nature of any industry. The companies that execute well will succeed. This means machines and technology that deliver on promises, management teams geared toward solving customer problems and technology that is easy to use for both non-expert and expert users.

The recent trend toward building trust into functional 3D printed parts with secure marking, such as QR codes, will intensify. 3D printing is a digital technology, not just a physical technology – combining the virtual and real. Users will look to 3D print more digital information into parts for authenticity, traceability and compliance and then extract that information on demand. This will become a major area of focus as people try to solve problems in the areas of service, production and engineering.

Read the rest of MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – RIZE Inc.

MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – Carbon

 
January 10th, 2019 by Dr Joseph M. DeSimone

2018 was a big year for the 3DP/AM industry as the field showed signs of bifurcation to now include clear capabilities for digital manufacturing at scale. The powerful convergence of hardware, software, and molecular science is enabling production at a scale the industry hasn’t seen before. At Carbon, we launched the largest digital fabrication example in history with the launch of the adidas Futurecraft 4D franchise. More than 100,000 pairs of 4D running shoes were fabricated and we are on track to manufacture into the millions in 2019. Other customers of ours also have examples of manufacturing with our Digital Light Synthesis™ technology, which will be announced in the first half of 2019. These production examples in the aggregate have triggered an important tipping point for the industry: we now see, for the first time, a cost-down curve with volume in the digital manufacturing world akin to the cost down-curve with volume that everyone relies on in the injection molding industry.  As a result, Carbon was able to take the price of our large volume resins from $300/L to $150/L last year to an unprecedented $50/L here in 2018.

Read the rest of MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – Carbon

MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – Adion Systems

 
January 9th, 2019 by Paul Van Metre


Manufacturing ERP software systems have traditionally been accounting-based systems with a small amount of shop floor functionality thrown in to help support the operational requirements of manufacturers. Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES) often do the heavy lifting as jobs leave the front office, helping to ensure efficient workflows, keep equipment at high levels of output, and schedules moving along. The fact that there is a minimum of two major software systems helping to run the company can cause extra work, lost business intelligence, reduced efficiency and much more.

Manufacturing is becoming ever more competitive, with high stakes for execution of complex manufacturing systems with more automation, and fewer workers producing more output than ever before. IIOT and I4.0 is ushering in an era where the office and the shop floor need to be more connected than ever before. ERP companies will need to either partner with MES companies more closely, developing collaborations to allow the free flow of data from the shop into the office, or develop their own tools to help workers on the factory floor reach peak efficiency.

Read the rest of MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – Adion Systems

MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – Tebis America

 
January 8th, 2019 by David Klotz


With the increasing lack of skilled labor, the need for automation will continue to be a must.  In the future, the need for automating CAM programs, standardizing tooling and creating best practice machining templates will be paramount. With companies investing in more sophisticated machines, simulation is critically important.  Not just for safety but also for simulation for how long a job will take and when any violations occur, such as collision, the need to adjust the program and tooling will also be paramount. More integrated solutions will be important, as will integrated CAD and CAM solution.  Same with interface.  Also, the need for other applications like an MES solution to track production, pre-plan and schedule within the operations.

Read the rest of MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – Tebis America

MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – The Uber Cloud

 
January 7th, 2019 by Wolfgang Gentzsch


Many industry predictions for 2019 are talking about the wider and growing acceptance of Artificial Intelligence, Big Data, Industry 4.0, Digital Twins, 3D Printing, and Cloud Computing; no surprise, as this is a continuation of 2018. But behind all these trends and ‘techniques’ is one big common trend fueled by the engineers’ desire to make their complex and demanding tools and techniques more applicable, economical, user-friendly, intuitive, and automatic, to be finally used by every engineer. This broader trend is now well-known as Democratization, Appification, Revolution in Simulation, Containerization, and more. In our CAE community, we see this trend greatly supported by NAFEMS, COFES, ASSESS, Rev-Sim, UberCloud and others, and by many outstanding individuals and groups.

Read the rest of MCADCafe Industry Predictions for 2019 – The Uber Cloud

Collaborate to Innovate with Simulation Applications and Digital Twins

 
January 4th, 2019 by Brianne Christopher

Multiphysics software is invaluable for simulating designs, devices, and processes in engineering, manufacturing, and scientific research. One of the greatest challenges of incorporating simulation into product development is making it accessible to everyone involved. COMSOL turns this challenge into an opportunity with tools for creating and deploying simulation applications and digital twins.

For simulation to be beneficial to the broader organization, it must be accessible in two distinct ways. First, team members in R&D, manufacturing, laboratory testing, and design should be able to run analyses without relying on simulation experts. The Application Builder, available in the COMSOL Multiphysics® software, makes this possible. Applications provide all collaborators with the capability to perform simulations, avoiding bottlenecks in the development process.

Read the rest of Collaborate to Innovate with Simulation Applications and Digital Twins




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