Autodesk Inventor
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Mark Topic as New
- Mark Topic as Read
- Float this Topic to the Top
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Printer Friendly Page
Re: new free tech preview on Autodesk Labs: Project Simulus mechanical simulatio
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Email to a Friend
- Report Inappropriate Content
Mainly, I wanted to make sure it wasn't just me. Thanks for the info. I have run a couple of static stress analyses and it has been nice to have.
Inventor Series 2010 SR SP4
Windows 7 64 bit - SP1
8 GB Ram
Quadro 2000
Re: new free tech preview on Autodesk Labs: Project Simulus mechanical simulatio
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Email to a Friend
- Report Inappropriate Content
I just posted a new build for download.
http://labs.autodesk.com/utilities/kraken/

Scott Sheppard
Program Manager
Autodesk Labs
Autodesk, Inc.
Re: new free tech preview on Autodesk Labs: Project Simulus mechanical simulatio
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Email to a Friend
- Report Inappropriate Content
Question: In the Thermal Steady State analysis is there a way to see deformation scale by applying various temperatures? Or is this still in development?
Re: new free tech preview on Autodesk Labs: Project Simulus mechanical simulatio
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Email to a Friend
- Report Inappropriate Content
Hi StagerB,
Yes, it does. Attached is a deformation image of a coupled thermal stress simulation, where two strips of dissimlar metals are bonded and then raised 20 degrees C from the intial temperature.
Please let us know if you have additional questions, comments or suggestions.
Thanks! -Hugh

Hugh Henderson
Simulation QA Engineer
DLS (Simulation and Material Sciences)
Re: new free tech preview on Autodesk Labs: Project Simulus mechanical simulatio
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Email to a Friend
- Report Inappropriate Content
Hi,
Can we have a tutorial in which the thermal boundaried are explained?
For example lets take a steel pipe in wich the inside surface is heated to 80 C
and we can see whats the temp on the outside surface.
Thanks
Dan
Re: new free tech preview on Autodesk Labs: Project Simulus mechanical simulatio
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Email to a Friend
- Report Inappropriate Content
For example in the picture, i would expect to see the
heat expand trough the part and get cooler temp on the outside.
Maybe mysetup is wrong, I dont know
Dan
Re: new free tech preview on Autodesk Labs: Project Simulus mechanical simulatio
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Email to a Friend
- Report Inappropriate Content
Hello,
I am trying to use it for thermal steady evaluation of thin layers (steel plates) insulated.
I have to apply convection inside and outside.
Two issues:
1. I get an error about my thin object:
230264.sim: Study 1 - Thermal: Error: Body 'Simulation Model:1/230264.iam:1/230264_SFT:1' is thin.
230264.sim: Study 1 - Thermal: Asynchronous cloud solve failed.
2. may I change properties to customized materials?
Apart from this, looks to be a very easy to use interface.
Thanks
Mario
Re: new free tech preview on Autodesk Labs: Project Simulus mechanical simulatio
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Email to a Friend
- Report Inappropriate Content
Hi Dan,
The initial temperature is 20 deg C, or 68 deg F (room temperature) unless an applied temperature exists.
For your pipe or wheel rim example, you would need to apply different temperatures to different faces for steady-state heat transfer to occur. Either that or apply heat flux or convection to the other face(s) that do not have the applied temperature.
By applying a single temperature to one face or a set of faces, in steady-state, the entire part will eventually become that specified temperature. This is because there is no heat leaving the body, as faces without any applied 'boundary condition' is treated as adiabatic (no heat transfer).
One thing to keep in mind is that you cannot apply an applied temperature + heat flux (or convection, etc) to the same face. It is somwhat similiar to applying a force and fixed constraint to the same face in LSS.
Hope this helps! Please let us know if you have any additional questions, comments or suggestions.
Best regards, -Hugh

Hugh Henderson
Simulation QA Engineer
DLS (Simulation and Material Sciences)
Re: new free tech preview on Autodesk Labs: Project Simulus mechanical simulatio
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Email to a Friend
- Report Inappropriate Content
Mario, unfortunately there is a limitation in the Simulus tech preview which is preventing it from processing parts that are very thin. We should be able to handle these sorts of models in a future update.
Sorry for the inconvenience.
Robert McMillan
Project Simulus Team
Autodesk
Re: new free tech preview on Autodesk Labs: Project Simulus mechanical simulatio
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Email to a Friend
- Report Inappropriate Content
I love Simulus. It is awsome. When can we have this as part from Inventor. Next week maybe ?
Also we would like to have a launcher from Inventor to Simulus.
Regards,
Dan


