by JoeP » Sat Jul 14, 2018 2:24 am
I have used Rhino since it was known as AccuModel, and Orca 3D since its inception. At Delta we had about 12 seats of Rhino and 3 floating licenses of Orca 3D. At Jensen where I now work all 30-40 of us have Rhino but we use GHS for stability and a few other pieces of software for propulsion, FEA etc. We do not use Orca3D. Rhino has become the go to tool for many if not most yacht design firms these days but there are others out there like Prosurf, Maxsurf, Multisurf, and Delft ship which seem to be capable. The big stuff like Cadmatic is mostly for large ship dedign, although I have designed yachts to 247 ft in Rhino with Orca and in my current job we design everything from 40 ft utility tugs to 400 ft articulated tug barge vessels with Rhino. In my opinion for the price Rhino and Orca are the best bet for 3d surface modeling and hydrostatics.
For drafting I have used AutoCAD at both Delta and Jensen but Rhino''s 2D drafting has improved a lot. Paul Bieker and Eric Jolley now do most of their drafting directly in Rhino. The last time i was in their office the were even importing stuff from Solidworks into Rhino for 2D work. We use AutoCAD at Jensen because we do all of our plate lofting in Ship Constructor, an industry standard program which is a 3rd party plug in for AutoCAD.
There is another program out there which I believe is a plug in for Rhino which does some pretty cool parametric structural modeling but I cannot remember it's name.
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