Posts Tagged ‘3DVision’

A Way to Stay in the Middle

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Oreo cookies, grilled cheese, and jelly donuts. What do these things have in common besides tasting great? They all have stuff in the middle. You may have some designs where you need geometry between 2 faces. SolidWorks has a feature that you might not know about. It’s the Mid Surface feature. What it does is create a surface between 2 faces. The surface will move if the two faces move. It is located under Insert>Surface>Mid Surface.

With the surface in the middle, you can thicken it and make it a solid.
This helps build in some “Design Intent” and intelligence into your model.

Josh Spencer

Josh Spencer
Application Engineer
3DVision Technologies

Attention Greater Cincinnati, It’s Meeting Time

Friday, July 16th, 2010

The last Thursday, 29th of July, is the Greater Cincinnati User Group meeting.
The meeting will be hosted at Harris Corporation, Broadcast Communications Division and will start at 5:30. The address of Harris Corp is 4393 Digital Way, Mason, OH 45040
Here’s the Agenda:
1. 5:30pm to 6:10pm – Networking, food and drinks
2. 6:15pm to 6:25pm – Host, Harris Corp., BCD Welcome – Dave Koontz
3. 6:30pm to 7:30pm – Multi body part modeling vs assemblies and how it is used in sheetmetal – Todd Bryant
4. 7:35pm to 8:15pm – The Other Project BUB, Part 2 – Land Speed Racing Designs for Bonneville – David Woodruff
5. 8:15pm to 8:30pm – Giveaways, Q&A, next meeting date
I will be at the meeting to answering all of the technical SolidWorks questions.

Please RSVP for the meeting: gcswug@cinci.rr.com

I hope to see everyone there.

Josh Spencer

Josh Spencer
Application Engineer
3DVision Technologies

2010 Simulation Studies Enhancements

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

Hey everyone! Back for another 2010 Simulation What’s New Blog. This one covers a little bit of everything.

Auto-Recover
There is now an option to backup and recover mesh and solution data. To set this up, go to Tools, Options. On the System Options tab, select Backup/Recover. You will see the option to “Save auto-recover info after meshing and after running a simulation study”.

Sim Studies 0

If you use this option, keep an eye on how large your backup folder gets. I can imagine this could make this blow up pretty fast.

Solver Window Improvements
Similar to the changes that were made to the mesh progress window, the Solver Window has been upgraded as well. You can opt to see a condensed solver window like this:

Sim Studies 1

or a more extensive solver window like so:

Sim Studies 2

Fatigue Analysis
You now have to be in a fatigue study to enter an S-N curve. Not sure of the reasoning for this one yet. I wonder how it will affect the creation of custom materials. It is now possible to use the stress values from a specific solution step of nonlinear and linear dynamic analysis for fatigue studies. In a damage plot, damage is now shown as a percentage versus a fraction as it used to be.
A new Fatigue Check Plot has been added to static studies for Simulation Professional seats. It alerts you to areas of the model that may need further investigation due to fatigue issues. It is a “blue is good, red is bad plot” so the red area should get further attention in the form of a fatigue analysis. A single constant-amplitude fatigue event, either fully-reversible or zero based, is used to generate the plot.

Design Study
A new Design Study has been added. This is basically a combination of the old Design Scenarios and the Optimization module. Just as before, the user specifies variables, ranges and goals and the software goes through all the possible combinations to determine the best solution. There is an extensive tutorial on how to use this in the What’s New Document for further investigation.

Offsets for Composites
Previously, the software always positioned the surface used to define the composite shell in the center of the stackup. Now, it can be positioned either in the center, top, bottom or anywhere in between. This is done by specifying an offset ratio. An Offset Ratio of zero, places the surface at the center of the shell. 0.5 places it at the top surface of the shell. -0.5 places it at the bottom of the shell. Interpolation between these values can place the shell anywhere in between as well.

Sim Studies 3

Beams
Beams are now supported for Nonlinear Studies. They have improved the Neutral Axis Detection. Many of you may have noticed that Simulation previously had a hard time detecting beam lengths that were relatively short compared to their width. Anything with a length to width ratio of less than 3 was an issue. The Define Beam Neutral Axis command allows the user to over-ride this. It is now possible to edit the Torsional Rigidity and Shear Factor for Beams. Beams can now be bonded to curved shells and sheet metal bodies. Beam information can also now be added to reports and saved out as an edrawing.

That wraps up this blog entry. As always spay and neuter your pets and if you have any questions, refer to the 2010 What’s New Document or contact us on the support line. See you next time!


Seth Bischoff

Seth Bischoff
CAE Support Engineer
3DVision Technologies

Meshing Enhancements in Simulation 2010

Monday, November 16th, 2009

Back for another addition of Simulation 2010 What’s New. Today’s episode covers meshing enhancements. Enjoy!

Curvature-based mesher
There are some improvements to the curvature-based mesher. Compatible meshing is now supported for touching solid faces. Previously, all curvature based meshes were incompatible. The curvature-based mesher now checks for interferences between components. If there are interferences, the following dialog pops up:

Mesh 3

Clicking “Yes” puts you into the interference detection dialog box. The curvature mesher handles small features better than it did in previous versions.

Mixed Meshing
The mesh is now compatible between shells and beams that act as stiffeners.

Memory Usage
The mesher now uses memory more efficiently. The following chart from the What’s New document shows the results of running an h-adaptive mesh on Windows XP 32 bit:

Mesh 2

Shell mesh
You can again define shells by selecting the surface of a solid body. This is something that they took away in the 2009 version. In 2009, only sheet metal of surface bodies could be defined as shells. Enough people must have complained to get them to bring this back.

Mesh Progress Window
They have changed the look of the Mesh Progress Window. It now shows memory usage, elapsed time, the number of components that failed to mesh, and mesh progress.

Mesh 1

That wraps up the discussion of mesh imporvements in Simulation 2010. As always, if you have any questions about anything discussed here, refer to the What’s New documentation or direct questions to us on the support line. See you next time!


Seth Bischoff

Seth Bischoff
CAE Support Engineer
3DVision Technologies

2010 Simulation Interface Enhancements

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Hey everyone! SolidWorks 2010 is out! There are a lot of small improvements in SolidWorks Simulation. There is nothing earth shattering but there are a lot of long over-due improvements that make Simulation friendlier to use. I will try to put together a series of short blogs that outline the highlights. This entry will cover interface enhancements.

Study tree feature names are now more descriptive. It used to be, unless you manually renamed your features, you had to edit a feature to tell what you had actually applied. This is no longer the case. Most features have descriptions in parentheses next to them in the feature tree.

2010 blog 1

If you hover over an item in the Simulation feature tree, an even more detailed description pops up.

2010 blog 2

2010 blog 3

Hovering over a symbol in the design window also pops up the details.

2010 blog 4

Fixtures, loads, and connectors can now be organized into folders. To do this, right click on Connections, Fixtures, or External Loads and select Create New Folder. Items can then be dragged into the new folder.. When using the Connectors dialog box, and connectors that are created while the dialog box pushpin is depressed will be placed in a new folder. If this is not wanted, the items can be dragged out of the folder back into the general connections folder.

It is now possible to group edit like features. For instance, if you have 25 identical bolt connectors, you can either ctrl select or shift select all the bolts you would like to edit, right click, select edit feature, edit a value in the dialog box, and accept the change. The change will be applied to all the selected connectors.

These may seem like relatively simple interface changes but I think they will make Simulation much more user friendly. As always, if you have any questions about any of the enhancements discussed here, the What’s New documentation is a great source or I would be happy to answer your questions on the support line.

Seth Bischoff

Seth Bischoff
CAE Support Engineer
3DVision Technologies

How to Correct a Singular Matrix Error Message

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

Here is an error message that I get on a fairly regular basis on the support line:

pic1

This is a pretty simple problem to solve. This error means that the model is not sufficiently restrained to allow the solver to reach a solution. This could be caused either by a lack of restraints or incorrect contact conditions. To trouble shoot this, right click on the study name and select Properties. In the solver box, there will be an option that says “Use soft spring to stabilize model”.

pic2

This option artificially stabilizes the model by attaching a soft spring element to every node in the model. This stabilizes the model just enough to allow the solver to come up with a solution. Re-run the analysis after activating the soft spring option. You will probably get a large displacement error message. Click No. Clicking Yes will activate the large displacement flag which will apply the load in small steps. This is not what we are going for here. We just want to see where the model is inadequately restrained.

pic3

Once the solver finishes, animate the results by right clicking on one of the result plots and selecting Animate. This should show you what is happening with the model. You may see movement that you would not expect. All degrees of freedom need to be restrained, even if motion is not expected in a given direction. Add the additional restraints or contact conditions then re-run the analysis. Once the analysis is behaving as expected, make sure you deactivate the soft spring option. The soft spring elements can slightly affect your stress results so always deactivate the soft spring option before trusting your results.

Seth Bischoff

Seth Bischoff
CAE Support Engineer
3DVision Technologies