I have to agree with Doug.
A drawing says "This is what I want you to know, and your need to know." whereas a 3D model says "I have all the information in here somewhere. Good luck finding it.".
And I too have a concern that there is not official or de facto standard for delivery, such as 3D PDF.
Gerry
In Reply to Doug Schaefer:
Drawings are easy for anyone technical to understand, require no special
software and are universal. It's a very mature format, having been
around for probably 100 years or more. I'd say communicating critical
dims, material specs, process notes, revision history, color and finish,
labeling and other non-geometry details is hard and error prone with a
3D model. Not so with a drawing.
Even after many years of speculation and talk of '3D drawings', and who
knows how much invested, they aren't yet close to replacing traditional
drawings. I have to wonder, if PTC had instead invested that time,
energy and money into making drawings easier to create and maintain if
we wouldn't have been better off.
In regards to 3D PDFS, you should know, support for the 3D PDF
generation has already been discontinued by Adobe:
http://blogs.adobe.com/ukchannelnews/2010/10/18/discontinued-acrobat-pro
-extended/
They say they'll still support viewing it, but 3D content generation is
now up to 3rd parties.
I too agree. I've been hearing that drawings are dead for 15 years. Too many people nowadays can build a model that looks OK superficially but they don't have a clue what "fully dimensioned" means or what the implication of different dimensioning schemes is. Considering how a feature will be presented/communicated on a drawing results in better models.
Jim Majewski
I didn't mean to start a debate of which method is best (2D vs. 3D).
I do beleive that going to a drawingless solution is something that is likely to be of value.
And I have heard that some companies are already doing this, at least internally.
But that doesn't mean that this is a universal solution for all companies.
In fact, we tried it and it did not work out.
I'm only saying that we need better/complete standards.
In Reply to Gerry Champoux:
I have to agree with Doug.
A drawing says "This is what I want you to know, and your need to know." whereas a 3D model says "I have all the information in here somewhere. Good luck finding it.".
And I too have a concern that there is not official or de facto standard for delivery, such as 3D PDF.
Gerry
In Reply to Doug Schaefer:Drawings are easy for anyone technical to understand, require no special
software and are universal. It's a very mature format, having been
around for probably 100 years or more. I'd say communicating critical
dims, material specs, process notes, revision history, color and finish,
labeling and other non-geometry details is hard and error prone with a
3D model. Not so with a drawing.
Even after many years of speculation and talk of '3D drawings', and who
knows how much invested, they aren't yet close to replacing traditional
drawings. I have to wonder, if PTC had instead invested that time,
energy and money into making drawings easier to create and maintain if
we wouldn't have been better off.
In regards to 3D PDFS, you should know, support for the 3D PDF
generation has already been discontinued by Adobe:
http://blogs.adobe.com/ukchannelnews/2010/10/18/discontinued-acrobat-pro
-extended/
They say they'll still support viewing it, but 3D content generation is
now up to 3rd parties.
There is one case where I will have to disagree. That is when you send a model to a supplier and they make their mold directly off of the model or machine paths directly off the model. Yes, there could also be a drawing to inspect to after it is complete but it is a case where the paradigm is actually in practice...
In Reply to Doug Schaefer:
Drawings are easy for anyone technical to understand, require no special
software and are universal. It's a very mature format, having been
around for probably 100 years or more. I'd say communicating critical
dims, material specs, process notes, revision history, color and finish,
labeling and other non-geometry details is hard and error prone with a
3D model. Not so with a drawing.
Even after many years of speculation and talk of '3D drawings', and who
knows how much invested, they aren't yet close to replacing traditional
drawings. I have to wonder, if PTC had instead invested that time,
energy and money into making drawings easier to create and maintain if
we wouldn't have been better off.
In regards to 3D PDFS, you should know, support for the 3D PDF
generation has already been discontinued by Adobe:
http://blogs.adobe.com/ukchannelnews/2010/10/18/discontinued-acrobat-pro
-extended/
They say they'll still support viewing it, but 3D content generation is
now up to 3rd parties.
Doug Schaefer
Have You ever been sitting in front of a ProE screen together with 10 people discussing design changes?
Consider doing this with an iPad (or something similar) on the table showing the 3D model.
Now compare this to sitting around a A0 (E size) drawing with a differently colored pen each. Which would You prefer?
BTW: We work with suppliers in China where we have to add extra annotations and additional remarks to important dimensions and tolerances on the drawing to avoid their (deliberately?) misunderstanding them. Imagine communicating important specifications via a 3D model...