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Inventor for Casework

4/27/16       
Al Schulz  Member

Website: ðåhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/alschulzðP

Does anyone use Inventor software for casework.

4/28/16       #3: Inventor for Casework ...
Jason Rogers  Member

Website: trademarkdrafting.com

First off, for 11 years, my business has been profitably and efficiently providing shop drawing & engineering services for custom casework, millwork, store fixtures etc... we primarily use AutoCAD.

I have used Inventor specifically for store fixtures and would say that if your work is highly repetitive, standardized assemblies, etc... Inventor may be a good choice. Setting up and cataloging your parts is very important to achieve real efficiency. Otherwise the time/dollar ratio get way off base. In our position as an outsource, we never found anyone willing to pay us to "crack the code." We lost a lot of money and never really satisfied our clients. Using AutoCAD, we do make money & have not accepted many new clients for years ... easy choice!

However, I do see a lot of potential for the right niche. Training is key and if you can find someone to show how they manage their workflow your would be leaps ahead of the curve.

We provide training but not in Inventor.

What is your niche?

4/28/16       #5: Inventor for Casework ...
Al Schulz  Member

Website: ðåhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/alschulzðP

Hi Jason,
I agree with you. I currently work for an Architectural Millwork Co. hell bent on using Inventor for casework, and only to provide a cut list. Which I believe is the dumbest thing I have ever done. Very labor intensive. Tried to talk them into Microvellum but they said to expensive. But I can do in Microvellum in three hours what we are spending a week trying to do in Inventor.

The main reason for the post was to see if anyone is using Inventor for casework. I think it would work great if you are going to build LOTS of multiples a single item. Not individual cabinets.

4/28/16       #6: Inventor for Casework ...
Chad R  Member

Website: http://www.northwayind.com

If your stuck with Inventor, may want to look here: http://woodworkforinventor.com/home

http://woodworkforinventor.com/home

5/3/16       #7: Inventor for Casework ...
Dan

I use both AutoCad (90%) and Inventor (10%). I am transitioning more to Inventor. Both have advantages and downfalls.

The big question is what are you trying to do with the software.

-Basic 2d/3d drawings
In this case basic AutoCad or similar product would work best.

-3d drawing and extracting information from drawings
Both AutoCad and Inventor will do this yet you will need and addon product extract information such as cutbill, edgebanding, parts for machining, ect.
Inventor allows the use of parametric parts and assemblies.
AutoCad without and addon does not have 3d parametric parts. AutoCad does not allow the user to stretch a group of 3d solids. (There are some addon products which will stretch solids.)

One thing I have learned is that Inventor is vastly different than AutoCad and proficiency in one does not make a user instantly proficient in the other. There is a learning curve.

6/17/16       #8: Inventor for Casework ...
Alien Member

might look at widom & associates


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