(no title)
bumbada | 4 years ago
We use it for creating as crappy designs as fast as possible, not getting designers to premature optimization.
For serious design no, we use expensive commercial software for that, once it is clear what the solution is.
For exploring lots of different spaces cheap 3d printer, cheap CNC milling machines and laser cutters are amazing.
We restrict access to serious software for early prototyping because people will try things like super complex organic shapes that require supports or special milling machines instead of machines that cost 100 less money.
That makes time to market so long and a design a competitor could squash the price when he uses cheap alternatives for manufacturing.
benhurmarcel|4 years ago
Restricting access to CAD features is a perplexing way to compensate for lack of mechanical engineering skills.
Brian_K_White|4 years ago
Aside from that, in general, requiring a student to do without a magic tool so they are forced to percieve and understand some fundamental that the magic tool hides, is hardly a new or perplexing concept. Otherwise, you get exactly what he just said, they got.