Paid version vs. Free version

Paid version vs. Free version

Anonymous
Not applicable
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14 Replies
Message 1 of 15

Paid version vs. Free version

Anonymous
Not applicable

I have the free subscription of Fusion 360. Does the paid version have more capabilities? In another words, is the paid version an upgrade?

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Accepted solutions (2)
18,011 Views
14 Replies
Replies (14)
Message 2 of 15

lynn_zhang
Alumni
Alumni
Accepted solution

Hi @Anonymous Welcome to Autodesk Community!

 

Paid version is the same as free version, as long as the product name is the same. The difference is between Fusion 360 Standard and Fusion 360 Ultimate. Also you receive more cloud credits in paid version but the functionality and capabilities are the same. See: Autodesk Fusion 360 Changes to Benefits





Lynn Zhang
Community Manager


Message 3 of 15

Anonymous
Not applicable
Thanks, lynn.zhang, Being an anxious, though a new student of Fusion 360, the learning curve is steep but exciting. Your input is very helpful.
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Message 4 of 15

lynn_zhang
Alumni
Alumni
Accepted solution

@Anonymous You're welcome! Have fun with Fusion 360 and feel free to post in the forum if you have any other questions.





Lynn Zhang
Community Manager


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Message 5 of 15

jondude1
Contributor
Contributor

Hi, is this still true?

 

Because I just renewed from an education license to a personal use license... But now most of My Most Current files no longer open...

 

As if they had been made with exclusive paid only features, inaccessible via the free version... I've clean reinstalled 3x, and can't even share the file to be downloaded to get it diagnosed in this forum... Because "downloading" is a paid only feature too...

 

J

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Message 6 of 15

acupani2002
Explorer
Explorer

Not true. The free version is not identical to the paid version.

I have the free version and tried to perform a simulation.

the free version told my I could not perform the simulation. I would need to upgrade to the paid version.

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Message 7 of 15

g-andresen
Consultant
Consultant

Hi,

Did you see when this statement was made ?

 

günther

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Message 8 of 15

acupani2002
Explorer
Explorer

Yes. Made in 2017.

Remember the statement can still be read today.

A person reading it today can be misguided and believe the statement is true but it isn’t true.

I am correcting the statement so people are not misguided.

Does this address your question?

Message 9 of 15

k6ls
Advocate
Advocate

F360 has continually crippled their 'free' versions.
This is the same thing that Solidworks did with Draftsight.

You are now limited to the number of files you can work with and the most

common/useful file export types are limited to paid users.   😕

AD isn't the same company it was when I started ~18 years ago.

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Message 10 of 15

wersy
Mentor
Mentor

More correct is to say, the limitation of the number of files that can be edited at the same time.
Of course, it is often annoying to write-protect files that are not needed.
But it does not restrict your work in any way.

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Message 11 of 15

rolfkoedam
Observer
Observer

I notice that you only can do one toolpath with the free  version.

I had the student version before the free and there I can do more toolpaths in one program 

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Message 12 of 15

jhackney1972
Consultant
Consultant

You statement that you can only do one toolpath in the Fusion 360 version is not correct.  The Animated GIF below will show this.

 

Personal Version.gif

John Hackney, Retired
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Message 13 of 15

etfrench
Mentor
Mentor

Simply add a folder and you can put multiple toolpaths with the same tool in it.

ETFrench

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Message 14 of 15

jhackney1972
Consultant
Consultant

I am puzzled?  I have access to a Fusion 360 Personal License and I can created as many toolpaths as I need using multiple tools.  In my previous post I show multiple toolpaths, each one using a different tool.

 

What restriction are you referring to when you say "Simply add a folder and you can put multiple toolpaths with the same tool in it."?

John Hackney, Retired
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Message 15 of 15

etfrench
Mentor
Mentor

Putting the toolpaths in a folder allows  you to post the folder and all of the toolpaths will run.  While you can select multiple toolpaths to create a single post, that may not be obvious when  you open the file later.  I also name each toolpath with a prefix of the order to run, the style, and a suffix of the tool type and diameter.  This also gets copied to the NCProgram.  It would be nice if the post dialog would populate the names.

ETFrench

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