View Full Version : Open-source engineering software?
Brian d marge
12th December 2008, 15:14
Does anyone here use open source software for Engineering.
I use Calculix , which I quite like BUT
I am having a lot of problems meshing STL files. I am having better success with netgen.
but sometimes a simple shape just will not mesh throwing up warnings such as:
ERROR: TRIG 146 has 2 neighbours!!!!
Does anyone use this, have experience, know someone who does ....
This problem with meshing is really holding things back,,,,
Kind regards Stephen
Max Preload
12th December 2008, 16:05
Hope it's neighbours aren't like these (http://www.kiwibiker.co.nz/forums/showthread.php?t=83215) ones.
But in all seriousness... I use Cosmosworks. I know it's not open source and it's certainly not cheap (or free... technically :shifty:) but it's good.
What sort of FEA are you doing? Not just structural?
nigel
12th December 2008, 16:05
I'm no engineer, but I do know a bit of OSS. Would gmsh work?
Brian d marge
12th December 2008, 17:23
Hi all I am using gsmh , it will show the part but produces an error when meshing to a tetrahedron , tet file .
What I do is design ,,,um motorbike bits, concentrating on of course Enfields ,
It started out of my Racing Enfield and sort of grew from there.
The biggest problem I face is getting a good mesh ,,I am disadvantaged in one respect and that is because of my computer skills , I use Linux , but I cant compile a program , not afraid of the command line ..but
I am trying to add the STEP module to netgen ,, have followed instructions but ,,,nadda
Hence the thread
Kind regards Stephen
Fooman
12th December 2008, 19:26
I use ABAQUS at work, but try some of the stuff here:
http://www-users.informatik.rwth-aachen.de/~roberts/software.html
Not knowing anything about your software, can you just edit the input file manually - all the mesh will really do is generate co-ordinates of nodes/elements. Some of the more nifty FEA analysis I've seen was meshed using an ascii editor, graph paper and an FX-82 to sort out the trig.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.5 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions Inc. All rights reserved.