Friday 3 January 2014

Increase Your Design Productivity with Good SolidWorks Training

In our current high-tech era, SolidWorks users have put an increasing number of demands on the software, and Dassault has responded by enhancing this 3D parametric software modeler with significantly more capacity and flexibility than it used to have. For example, today, SolidWorks can run on a Windows virtual operating system on a Macintosh. It is designed for collaborative environments, and handles not only part design, but simulation specifically designed for many different industries.

While CATIA dominates the automotive and space / aeronautic industries, SolidWorks is the most popular 3D parametric modeling software worldwide, and also has significant representation in high schools, colleges, technical / vocational schools, and universities. You will be hard pressed to find a post-secondary school now not offering some SolidWorks training.


Many private firms offer excellent SolidWorks training, and there are hundreds of samples of SolidWorks training videos on free video portals like YouTube, Vimeo, and Daily Motion. In fact, you can accumulate dozens of hours of free SolidWorks training by mining such sites as YouTube. Video-Tutorials.Net alone offers one hundred plus SolidWorks tutorials on YouTube, at their channel, videotutorials2. While you can study at a college, or at an in-house SolidWorks training facility, you get your best value for your money by working with a private tutorial vendor, where you can get hundreds of hours of SolidWorks training videos at a fraction of the cost of in-house SolidWorks training.


Self-study has the advantage of letting you study at your own pace, and from any computer or location of your choice. This flexibility makes self-study SolidWorks training more popular and effective than the more structured and formal types of training.

Where to start yourself study? Begin with SolidWorks essentials training, like sketching and drawing, part design, assembly design, and then once the basics are under your belt, branch out into the more intermediate and advanced areas like surface design and modeling, sheet metal design and modeling, simulation, PhotoView 360 (where you learn to make photorealistic images and animations / videos of your models, that you can share with customers, colleagues, and those in your supply chain), Simulation (where you test the robustness and effectiveness of your design / model in the environment where it will be used), Routing & Piping, Mold Design, Weldments and so on. Video-Tutorials.Net has SolidWorks training that offers numerous sample project files with which you can practice.







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