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Nội quy và vi phạm Đăng Nội Quy Diễn Đàn - là tài liệu bắt buộc phải đọc đối với tất cả các thành viên tham gia sinh hoạt trên MES Lab. Danh sách các vi phạm cũng được nêu tại đây.

 
 
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Old 31-07-2007, 03:18 PM   #1
Nova
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Default Nội quy Diễn đàn

CATIA File Conversion?
CATIA V5 and V6 can directly use the CATIA V4 models, but changes in the CATIA data structure requires data conversion from CATIA V4 to V5/V6. This is due to both a change in geometric kernel between CATIA V4 and CATIA V5, and changes in the CAD data structure between CATIA V5 and CATIA V6 - wikipedia.org
NỘI QUY DIỄN ĐÀN

Vi phạm sẽ bị xử lý xóa bài - treo nick mà không cần báo.

1. Tìm trước khi hỏi để tránh lặp lại chủ đề đã có !!!

2. Gửi bài đúng mục, không hỏi cùng một vấn đề ở nhiều mục (= spam).

3. Ghi tiêu đề rõ nghĩa, không sử dụng tiêu đề như: "Cứu em", "Help me!", "Giúp tôi với",... Nếu bạn cần hỏi, xin ghi rõ [Cần hỏi] hoặc [Xin hỏi] hoặc [Hỏi] ở đầu tiêu đề. Tương tự như vậy với việc xin tài liệu, cần nhờ giúp,...

4. Gõ đúng chính tả và bằng tiếng Việt có dấu hoặc tiếng Anh

5. Cấm spam! Cấm câu bài. Cấm post nhiều bài ngắn ngủn liên tiếp. Hãy dùng chức năng Edit.

6. Tôn trọng bản quyền, ghi trích dẫn đầy đủ, không post tài liệu, phần mềm bất hợp pháp lên diễn đàn. Cấm share key, cr@ck,...

7. Không nói chuyện chính trị - tôn giáo - dân tộc

8. Tôn trọng thành viên khác và tự trọng

9. Giữ gìn sự trong sáng của tiếng Việt. Cấm dùng ngôn ngữ xì-tin kiểu: hok, pé, pác, roài, muh,...hay tương tự.

10. Không dùng tên đăng nhập là các tên trùng với tên lãnh tụ, tên diễn đàn, tên với nghĩa "admin", "mod",...tên có nội dung đi ngược thuần phong mỹ tục và tên mang nghĩa nhạo báng cá nhân, tổ chức.

11. Không post tài liệu, phần mềm có bản quyền trên diễn đàn.

Mong các thành viên nghiêm chỉnh thực hiện. Mọi vi phạm có thể dẫn tới nick bị TREO mà không báo trước.

Ban Quản trị MES Lab. Forum

Cập nhật ngày 02/01/2010

SolidWorks - History & Market
SolidWorks was introduced in 1995 as a competitor to CAD programs such as Pro/ENGINEER, I-DEAS, Unigraphics, and CATIA. SolidWorks Corporation was founded in 1993 by Jon Hirschtick, who recruited a team of engineers to build a company that developed 3D CAD software, with its headquarters at Concord, Massachusetts, and released its first product, SolidWorks 95, in 1995. In 1997 Dassault Systèmes, best known for its CATIA CAD software, acquired the company and currently owns 100% of its shares. SolidWorks was headed by John McEleney from 2001 to July 2007, and is now headed by Jeff Ray. Solidworks Corp. has sold over a million licenses of Solidworks worldwide. The Sheffield Telegraph comments that Solidworks is the world's most popular CAD software. Its user base ranges from individuals to large companies, and covers a very wide cross-section of manufacturing market segments. Commercial sales are made through an indirect channel, which includes dealers and partners throughout the world. Directly competitive products to SolidWorks include Pro/ENGINEER, Solid Edge, and Autodesk Inventor.
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__________________
"KHÔNG ĐƯA LINK VÀ PHẦN MỀM BẤT HỢP PHÁP & CR@CK TRÊN DIỄN ĐÀN"

[1] Tìm đại lý phân phối & hợp tác kinh doanh hàng tiêu dùng Hàn Quốc. Liên hệ YM: novabk2000

[2] Tìm kiếm sản phẩm & nhà cung cấp máy móc, thiết bị,...Hàn Quốc miễn phí.
Liên hệ YM: novabk2000

[3] Nickname Nova chỉ dùng duy nhất ở MES Lab.!. Không chịu trách nhiệm về nick này ở các diễn đàn khác

thay đổi nội dung bởi: Nova, 02-01-2010 lúc 10:52 PM. Lý do: Bổ sung Nội quy
Nova is online now  
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Scroll to read all of the content - For Students who want to learn Engineering English Site Keywords in English:
machine, cnc, tools, engineering, cad cam, solidworks, pro engineer, catia, mastercam, inventor, mold, cae, materials, heat treat, mechanics, alloys, materials, steels, industry, machining, casting, machine, model, 3d, stl, scanner, laser, ptc, catia, cimatron, visi, solidcam, mold, die, jobs, software, metallurgy, iscar, mori seiki, mazak, cutting, edm, cae, sodick, automobile, sandvik, shipbuilding, aerospace, technique, experiment, fixture, valve, fluid, airplane, lathe, milling, automation, sensor, robot, industry, design, product, factory, equipment, welding, weld, machine element, pipe, astm, aisi, rfid, steel, standard, sae, jis, din, gost, gb, afnor, iron, metal, processing, forming, shaping, rolling, punching, drawing, chill, foundry, crucible, furnace, materials, ferrous, data, ceramic, polymer, composite, organic, semiconductor, superconductor, english, free, grammar, nano, biomaterials, manufacture, manufacturing,a ssembly, instrument, measurement, QC, QA, quality control, quality assurance, ergonomic, Vericut, Artcam, delcam, unigraphic, nx, pdm, plm, npd, siemens, spaceclaim, vericut, autocad, development, research, scholarship, autodesk, mechatronics, ebooks, free, download, career, recruitment, mechanical, study, student, solutions, services, maintenance, expert, scientist, engineer, surface, dfx, dwg, bearing, meter, plant, component, market
This Month's reference reading for better English skills:
Mechanical Engineering:
Many mechanical engineering companies, especially those in industrialized nations, have begun to incorporate computer-aided engineering (CAE) programs into their existing design and analysis processes, including 2D and 3D solid modeling computer-aided design (CAD). This method has many benefits, including easier and more exhaustive visualization of products, the ability to create virtual assemblies of parts, and the ease of use in designing mating interfaces and tolerances. Other CAE programs commonly used by mechanical engineers include product lifecycle management (PLM) tools and analysis tools used to perform complex simulations. Analysis tools may be used to predict product response to expected loads, including fatigue life and manufacturability. These tools include finite element analysis (FEA), computational fluid dynamics (CFD), and computer-aided manufacturing (CAM). Using CAE programs, a mechanical design team can quickly and cheaply iterate the design process to develop a product that better meets cost, performance, and other constraints. No physical prototype need be created until the design nears completion, allowing hundreds or thousands of designs to be evaluated, instead of a relative few. In addition, CAE analysis programs can model complicated physical phenomena which cannot be solved by hand, such as viscoelasticity, complex contact between mating parts, or non-Newtonian flows As mechanical engineering begins to merge with other disciplines, as seen in mechatronics, multidisciplinary design optimization (MDO) is being used with other CAE programs to automate and improve the iterative design process. MDO tools wrap around existing CAE processes, allowing product evaluation to continue even after the analyst goes home for the day. They also utilize sophisticated optimization algorithms to more intelligently explore possible designs, often finding better, innovative solutions to difficult multidisciplinary design problems. Computer Aided Design - CAD:
Computer-Aided Design is one of the many tools used by engineers and designers and is used in many ways depending on the profession of the user and the type of software in question. There are several different types of CAD. Each of these different types of CAD systems require the operator to think differently about how he or she will use them and he or she must design their virtual components in a different manner for each. There are many producers of the lower-end 2D systems, including a number of free and open source programs. These provide an approach to the drawing process without all the fuss over scale and placement on the drawing sheet that accompanied hand drafting, since these can be adjusted as required during the creation of the final draft. 3D wireframe is basically an extension of 2D drafting. Each line has to be manually inserted into the drawing. The final product has no mass properties associated with it and cannot have features directly added to it, such as holes. The operator approaches these in a similar fashion to the 2D systems, although many 3D systems allow using the wireframe model to make the final engineering drawing views. 3D "dumb" solids (programs incorporating this technology include AutoCAD and Cadkey 19) are created in a way analogous to manipulations of real world objects. Basic three-dimensional geometric forms (prisms, cylinders, spheres, and so on) have solid volumes added or subtracted from them, as if assembling or cutting real-world objects. Two-dimensional projected views can easily be generated from the models. Basic 3D solids don't usually include tools to easily allow motion of components, set limits to their motion, or identify interference between components. 3D parametric solid modeling require the operator to use what is referred to as "design intent". The objects and features created are adjustable. Any future modifications will be simple, difficult, or nearly impossible, depending on how the original part was created. One must think of this as being a "perfect world" representation of the component. If a feature was intended to be located from the center of the part, the operator needs to locate it from the center of the model, not, perhaps, from a more convenient edge or an arbitrary point, as he could when using "dumb" solids. Parametric solids require the operator to consider the consequences of his actions carefully. Some software packages provide the ability to edit parametric and non-parametric geometry without the need to understand or undo the design intent history of the geometry by use of direct modeling functionality. This ability may also include the additional ability to infer the correct relationships between selected geometry (e.g., tangency, concentricity) which makes the editing process less time and labor intensive while still freeing the engineer from the burden of understanding the model’s design intent history. These kind of non history based systems are called Explicit Modellers. The first Explicit Modeling system was introduced to the world at the end of 80's by Hewlett-Packard under the name SolidDesigner. This CAD solution, which released many later versions, is now sold by PTC as "CoCreate Modeling" Draft views are able to be generated easily from the models. Assemblies usually incorporate tools to represent the motions of components, set their limits, and identify interference. The tool kits available for these systems are ever increasing; including 3D piping and injection mold designing packages. Mid range software are integrating parametric solids more easily to the end user: integrating more intuitive functions (SketchUp), using the best of both 3D dumb solids and parametric characteristics (VectorWorks), making very real-view scenes in relative few steps (Cinema4D) or offering all-in-one (form•Z). Top end systems offer the capabilities to incorporate more organic, aesthetics and ergonomic features into designs (Catia, GenerativeComponents). Freeform surface modelling is often combined with solids to allow the designer to create products that fit the human form and visual requirements as well as they interface with the machine. Modern CNC Machines:
Numerical control (NC) refers to the automation of machine tools that are operated by abstractly programmed commands encoded on a storage medium, as opposed to manually controlled via handwheels or levers, or mechanically automated via cams alone. The first NC machines were built in the 1940s and '50s, based on existing tools that were modified with motors that moved the controls to follow points fed into the system on paper tape. These early servomechanisms were rapidly augmented with analog and digital computers, creating the modern computed numerically controlled (CNC) machine tools that have revolutionized the design process. In modern CNC systems, end-to-end component design is highly automated using CAD/CAM programs. The programs produce a computer file that is interpreted to extract the commands needed to operate a particular machine via a post processor, and then loaded into the CNC machines for production. Since any particular component might require the use of a number of different tools—drills, saws, etc.—modern machines often combine multiple tools into a single "cell". In other cases, a number of different machines are used with an external controller and human or robotic operators that move the component from machine to machine. In either case, the complex series of steps needed to produce any part is highly automated and produces a part that closely matches the original CAD design.
Source: Wikipedia