I agree with Tim, it took 3 years of training before I had any confidence in my Solidworks stress simulations and nothing got presented until it was checked by a colleague.Just trusting the simulator sometimes gets you garbage.
I agree with Tim, it took 3 years of training before I had any confidence in my Solidworks stress simulations and nothing got presented until it was checked by a colleague.Just trusting the simulator sometimes gets you garbage.
Right you are, Tim. I did a bunch of mathematical modeling during my career, both good and bad. Modeling is a powerful tool for designing and understanding things, but the worst mistake you can ever make is to loose track of the fact that it is always only a model.The big thing about any kind of simulation is that you have to either know what the simulator is doing under the hood, or have a good idea of what you should see. Because sometimes they go crazy.
Just trusting the simulator sometimes gets you garbage.
(And I've used FEMM -- it does its job well, but the learning curve is steep).
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