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I am designing a small biogas digester of a unique type. (Biogas, primarily a mix of methane and carbon dioxide, is an alternative energy source: it is natural natural gas. Biogas is the biological result of an anaerobic composting process.)
The digester is made primarily from polystyrene insulation welded to itself, with wood members inside and out for resisting the modest forces provided by a couple of feet of water. Plans for making these digesters are being produced via Inventor (2018, Pro). An image of the [exploded] digester is attached; further details on request.
I have used and programmed computers since 1975. I am fluent in Excel, VBA, and somewhat better than a duffer in Inventor.
I have a couple of purchased programs that will allow me to produce cut lists for the various types of standard cut lumber needed (1/4s, 1x6s. 2x4s, plywood, etc.). These programs both produce graphical views and lists that can be exported into Excel or put into CVS/TXT files, and so on.
What I would love to have is a means of taking the lists that these programs can produce and turning those-- automagically-- into some really simple IAMs or IPTs, featuring one or several standard lengths of lumber with marks to show where to make each cut. Obviously I can produce these parts or assemblies by hand, but when the design changes, then the possibility is that a lot of 'by-hand' work would get tossed into the air to land in an untidy heap.
Are there essentially non-programmatic approaches that might prove fruitful, such as connecting Inventor to Excel in order to do... [something]? Or should I be thinking about or using iLogic/VBA/C#/voodoo?
Solved! Go to Solution.