Product category:
3D CAD software
News Release from: Delcam | Subject: PowerShape 7
Edited by the Engineeringtalk Editorial
Team on 19 June 2006
Hybrid modeller is smart on the surface
The latest release of Delcam's PowerShape hybrid CAD modeller offers easier to use surface modelling tools for designers working with complex shapes.
The latest release of Delcam's PowerShape hybrid CAD modeller offers easier to use surface modelling tools for designers working with complex shapes It aims to overcome finally the belief that surface modellers are inherently too difficult to learn for the casual user and can only be operated by dedicated specialists
This article was originally published on Engineeringtalk on 23 Jul 2008 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
Software offers multiple modelling techniques
Having all the different modelling techniques in a single package reduces the need to transfer data between multiple programs and so streamlines the whole product development process
CAD software receives press design update
Delcam Toolmaker CAD software's deep-draw press tool design updates shorten design time by providing dedicated functionality for many of the tasks involved in preparing the tooling.
The development focus for the new version, PowerShape 7, has been to recapture the simplicity offered by the software when it was first introduced in 1999.
"When we first launched PowerShape, customers were impressed by features like the intelligent cursor which made the software so much easier to use than other surface modellers", commented Delcam's CAD Development Director, Stuart Watson.
"Since then, we have added more and more functionality to the program".
Further reading
Educational CAD software explained in podcasts
Training programme comprises 27 tutorials, covering all stages from basic sketching through to solid and surface modelling.
Reverse engineering makes medical implants fit
Delcam software helps Isiqu Orthopaedics to design and manufacture custom-made bone and joint implants in patients with tumours and major bone loss.
"While our established users have welcomed this process, it has made the interface more intimidating to potential new customers", he added.
"For PowerShape 7, we have re-organised the whole interface to place commands in a more logical structure and so make it easier both for new users to learn and faster for existing users to operate".
The other key innovation in PowerShape 7 is smart surfacing.
Like other surface modellers, PowerShape has always provided a number of alternative methods for constructing a surface from a given set of lines, arcs or points.
The user has had to choose between a number of solutions to pick the result that is most appropriate for the particular design.
With smart surfacing, the choice of method is made automatically by the software to give the best possible surface.
If the user is unhappy with the automatic selection, or is simply curious to see other options, he can scroll through the alternative solutions.
Perhaps the most impressive thing about smart surfacing is that the software's selection is updated automatically as extra information is added to the design.
As any additional lines or points are inserted into the model, PowerShape will review the chosen surfacing method and regenerate the surface if an alternative solution has become more appropriate.
PowerShape 7 also features an additional morphing method for the distortion of an existing design into a new shape.
Flexibox morphing allows the user to push, pull, twist or bend any standard geometry into a complex design.
It can be applied to whole models, or individual solids or sections of solids.
Morphing allows rapid styling changes to be made in a single operation that would otherwise require extensive, time-consuming modification of the separate elements in a design.
It is, therefore, ideal for the "what if" stage of new product development, when designers need to generate quickly a number of variations on a new concept. Request a free brochure from Delcam ...
• Delcam: contact details and other news
• Email this article to a colleague
• Register for the free Engineeringtalk email newsletter
• Engineeringtalk Home Page

