Archive for the ‘DriveWorks’ Category

Enhancements in DriveWorks 7

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

(continued from yesterday’s post)

I think my favorite enhancement is that now DriveWorks Pro can be used as a sales configurator. True, true DriveWorks 6 did allow users sales groups to help produce sales quotes and approval models very quickly. However honestly, DriveWorks 6 is more of a design automation tool than something you would put in front of a customer to create a first impression. It worked best if your sales associate sat with his potential customer and they used DriveWorks together.

Now that DriveWorks Pro is more of a sales configurator, it is something you could put on your own web site [via DriveWorks Live], and allow your customers to directly interface with your product. Imagine your customer connecting to your site, he enters the parameters for your product, the approval models and a quote are sent directly to him and if he likes it, he could enter in is PO number and production drawings go right to your production facility.

If you saw DriveWorks Live in version 6, it is a child compared to what it is like in version 7. It is browser independent, allows for popup windows (the good kind, not spammy) and is significantly more customizable.

DriveWorks 6 did have a very simple workflow – Saved specifications, specifications pending release, and released specifications. As a design automation tool that pretty much did the job. Now that DriveWorks 7 can involve the customer and sales team more, DriveWorks 7 has significantly improved how specifications flow through your origization. The flow is now customizable, and has a graphical interface that is similar to how you would build a flow chart in Microsoft Visio. The workflow helps automate the entire sales approval process to ensure the customized design data gets to your production floor as quickly as possible ensuring vital steps are not missed along the way.

Eight more days until the release date…

Jeff Sweeney

Jeff Sweeney

Engineering Data Specialist
3DVision Technologies

DriveWorks 7 – Seriously

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Two of my all time favorite jokes are: “Two guys walk into a bar…which is kinda funny because after the first one did, you’d thought the second would have seen it!” and “We’ll put a man on Saturn before DriveWorks 7 comes out!”. While they are both funny to me, I admit I get more laughs with the first joke.

Not surprisingly it appears the second joke will be even less funny after February 19th because….that is the date of the DriveWorks 7 release! Yup after almost three years, the good folks at DriveWorks are updating their flag ship product. [In their defense, they have been rather busy -releasing DriveWorks Solo  in October.] I got my first sneak peek of DriveWorks 7 over a year ago, and this year old gag order was beginning to chafe a bit. Now the gag as been removed and I can finally tell you a little bit about it.

DriveWorks Pro, as I believe DriveWorks 7 will commonly be called, has over three years of improvements. I’ll give you a little taste today, then finish the rest in tomorrow’s post.

First, DriveWorks Pro no longer uses Excel as its backbone engine –it now has its own solving engine, with this new lower overhead you’ll notice a performance increase right away. All Excel functions are still available, so we are keeping the good and leaving the bad behind.

There are tons of little productivity enhancements – too many to list in a blog…most of them involve getting rid of all the little steps you had to do in DriveWorks 6 to make things work. As an example in DriveWorks 6, if you wanted to be able to move your project from one directory to another, first you had to make a variable of your path, then you had to use that variable to represent your path in your file name rules. Certainly not a difficult task, but it took two steps AND you had to know to do those steps. Now by default, your files can be relative to the project and thus projects are much more portable. Lots of little things that were easy -if you knew how to do them have been made easier because you don’t have to do them any longer!

As Glen, co-founder of DriveWorks said: “Everyone says their product is easy to use. No one puts on the box: ‘Now harder to use than ever’ our goal was to make using the  product much more intuitive.” Intuitive it is! The new interface is cleaner and faster, many less hoops to go through to get your rules built.

Nice productivity enhancements, but are there any new features? Yeah, I’ll tell you about them tomorrow.

Jeff Sweeney

Jeff Sweeney

Engineering Data Specialist
3DVision Technologies

Enterprise 2010 is released and DriveWorks shows

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

Enterprise 2010 was released Tuesday. Download it now!

I have three DriveWorks webinars coming up in November. One each on DriveWorksXpress, Solo and Professional. Sign up for one of them -the cost is right.

Two topics – one blog. Your lucky day.

Jeff Sweeney

Jeff Sweeney

Engineering Data Specialist

3DVision Technologies

DriveWorks Solo is here

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

The email bag has been overflowing with my blogging fans upset with me about last week’s blogging tease over DriveWorks Solo. To all of you who complained, especially to you “Over Constrained and Angry in Athens Ohio”, I am sorry.

First, I haven’t yet found the time to install my own copy of DriveWorks Solo, so my review is simply of a demo Maria gave for me. I hope to be able to review the installation for you soon, but for now you and “Waiting for DriveWorks 7 in Indianapolis” are going to live with what I give you.

solologo

Here are the highlights I saw. Hold on, there is a lot here:

  • Solo works in the SolidWorks task pane!
    • This does make the dialog boxes a little simpler than DriveWorks, but years ahead of DriveWorksXpress. Another nice benefit is that you can see the SolidWorks model as you build your specification
    • The task pane can have multiple pages, giving you the ability to have multiple input tabs, giving you control over the specification flow
    • You have several controls available to you as you design your Solo interface: combo boxes, check boxes, text boxes, even dynamic pictures make the specification process easier
  • The rules you create still follow Microsoft Excel’s format, but they are much easier to create than in DWX
    • Variables are available for use, to make the syntax of the Excel functions easier to read and write
    • There is a nice little rule builder page to help you write the functions and several debugging tools available to help if the formula are returning values different than what you expect
    • There are filters in the rule builder to help manage rules for larger assemblies
    • Support for lookup tables-This means you wont need to embed a zillion “if…then” statements as you build your rules
  • You can determine where your cloned files are saved, the location doesn’t have to be the same as the master files as in DWX (someone give me a High 5!)
  • Can produce more than just SolidWorks files. This can be helpful if you want to automatically generate quotes, BOMs, order acknowledgments, etc.
  • Some drawing control
    • Not as much control over drawings as DriveWorks, but you can control the position of your views -and that alone is a nice step up from DWX
  • Replacement models
    • This one is difficult to describe, so let me give you an example of how this could be used. Imagine that you had a bearing in your assembly and depending on the specification you wanted to be able to swap one bearing for another. Rather than having to drive all the dimensions in a bearing you can simply swap the entire part in for another one. This alone can reduce the number of rules you need to create significantly!
  • Can export files in all file formats SW can produce: IGES, SAT, STEP, etc

I’ve saved the coolest for last:

  • Live preview of assembly & drawings
    • If, as you are building your specification you wonder…”Hmmm I wonder what changing this value would do?” Simply change the value, click update and the model will update in SolidWorks right before your eyes! -Great for doing “What If’” scenarios or ensuring the final assembly is going to look like what you expect.

I think it is going to be a productive product. Jump over to http://www.driveworkssolo.com to learn more. (They have even installed the product so you can see video rather than reading about it.)

I’m with you “I Don’t Read Blogs from Louisville Kentucky” – -DriveWorks Solo…I don’t get the name either. What does it mean? “SweeneyWorks” would have been a much better choice.

Jeff Sweeney

Jeff Sweeney
Engineering Data Specialist
3DVision Technologies

DriveWorks Solo comes out in October (or sooner?)

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

Today DriveWorks fans have two choices: DriveWorksXpress and DriveWorks.

DriveWorksXpress is a nice little application…does a lot of things and even is a viable tool for some people….but let’s face it the interface is a bit old school and it typically doesn’t take long for you to wish you had more features.

DriveWorks is the big daddy. If you dream it, you probably can do it. Web interface, connections to databases, the ability to generate file types beyond SolidWorks, pretty dialog boxes, …the list goes on and on.

Until DriveWorks Solo comes out, you have your choice. Hot or cold. DriveWorks Solo comes in just between the two. I saw my first demo of it today, I think it will hit a nice sweet spot for many. I am hoping to get my copy early next week so expect a more in depth review soon! (I could give you more now, but the men in suits forbid it.)

How’s that for a teaser??

Jeff Sweeney

Jeff Sweeney
Engineering Data Specialist
3DVision Technologies

Do-it-yourself DWX Class

Friday, June 12th, 2009

For me the best way to learn something new is to simply try it on a little non-production data set.

I’ve put together the simplest little play data set I could come up with -just one part and a drawing file…in less than five minutes you’ll have a very basic understanding of what ‘Xpress can do and you’ll have a set of files you can expand on to learn more.

(DriveWorksXpress can work with assemblies, but again, we are going to keep this example very simple, so I can keep you under the five minutes I promised you.)

Let’s imagine we sell tubing and have these design constraints:

  • Stock OD’s can be sold from 3-6″ in 1/4″ increments
  • If the OD is greater than 5″ the tube thickness needs to be 1/4″ else it should be 1/8″
  • This tube is stocked at 6″ long, but can be cut down to any length the customer requests
  • Your customers like to have their name on the drawing and in file name

Here is all you have to do to try it:

  1. Download this file, and extract the three files into an empty directory
  2. In SolidWorks, Tools -> DriveWorksXpress (you may get a notification about a database not being found, this is normal (’cause you haven’t made one yet), click okay)
  3. Choose “Create/Change Database” and click Next
  4. Find the “tube.mbd” file and click “Open”
  5. Click the “Run” tab in the top right side of the DriveWorksXpress dialog
  6. Enter in your desired values and click next.
  7. Done! You should now have two new files in your directory describing your new parts. You can now run the specification over and over.

That’s it. I’m done holding your hand. Play around see if you can reverse engineer it.

Jeff Sweeney

Jeff Sweeney
Engineering Data Specialist
3DVision Technologies

Sharks, minnows and DriveWorks

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

Back when I was on the swim team, we would play a game called “Sharks and Minnows”. One kid would stay in the middle of the pool – the shark. Everyone else would be on one side of the pool – the minnows. When coach blew his whistle all the minnows have to swim on the other side of the pool. Any minnow tagged by the shark becomes a shark for the next round. Thus for the second round there may be 1 or 2 more sharks than last time making it a little harder for the minnows because there were more sharks. Round 3 may start with 5 or 6 more sharks. Each round the number of sharks grew “exponentially’. The game continued until there was one lucky minnow left.

This game describes a typical successful DriveWorks implementation.  [If you are a SolidWorks user, you don't need me to connect the dots for you. You may skip to the next paragraph. AutoCAD users: read on.] The minnows are your work tasks. The shark is DriveWorks. In a DriveWorks implementation, oftentimes it is best to start small -maybe just one of your easier, more commonly used projects. After you get that project complete, you will have more time available to you to add another project to your DriveWorks collection….and so on, and so on -it’s a snowball effect.

On the other side of the coin, I just learned of a “failed” DriveWorks implementation. The customer decided they wanted to do their entire product line at once -and for them this was a huge task. They pulled an engineer off of production and assigned him to the task of building their DriveWorks system full time. This engineer was competent, but management changed the direction they wanted to go with DriveWorks several times -often times causing a loss of work. Meanwhile, production began to fall behind. Now this company had a decision to make. Pull a second designer off of production and put him in to help with the implementation and risk losing orders or put off the DriveWorks implementation. I am sure you can guess what happened. I suppose it isn’t fair to say the implementation failed because they do have plans to try again. Hopefully they will try a more manageable approach next time.

Jeff Sweeney

Jeff Sweeney
Engineering Data Specialist
3DVision Technologies

DriveWorks works with SolidWorks 2009

Friday, September 19th, 2008

Good news for all of you early adopters out there. DriveWorks has confirmed that DriveWorks 6 is compatible with SolidWorks 2009.

I was a little worried that it would have trouble with Speedpak assemblies but Glen Smith says we are good to go!

In case you were wondering, there really isn’t much new in DriveWorksXpress 2009. Drat.

Jeff Sweeney

Jeff Sweeney
Engineering Data Specialist
3DVision Technologies

DriveWorksXpress is for people who like weekends

Friday, August 29th, 2008

DriveWorksXpress has been out for over a year now. If my surveys are correct, odds are you haven’t even looked at it.

Why? Do you like doing the “SaveAs”/”SaveAs Copy” dance? Do you enjoy making drawings so much that you would rather change references rather than learning something new? …oh I bet you like doing repetitive tasks…over and over again? [repetitive tasks over and over...I crack myself up.]

If you answered “yes” to any of the questions above, then okay DWX isn’t for you. You are not near lazy enough for me to even look you in the eye.

…but…if you hate of tedious work -give it a look see. Heck, you already own it, it is built into SolidWorks 2008. Everyone can find a use for it, you don’t have to be an “Engineer To Order” company. — If ever you start parts from existing parts; or assemblies from existing assemblies this baby is your ticket to early weekends. Do you have 5 minutes for me to prove me right?

Jeff Sweeney

Jeff Sweeney
Engineering Data Specialist
3DVision Technologies

DriveWorks interview with Maria

Friday, August 1st, 2008

SolidWorks: Heard! is a great little place where you can hear podcasts relating to SolidWorks. Make sure you hear podcast #162, Maria Sarkar co-founder of DriveWorks is interviewed.

Jeff Sweeney

Jeff Sweeney
Engineering Data Specialist
3DVision Technologies