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Bricscad electrical
Bricscad electrical








bricscad electrical
  1. Bricscad electrical pro#
  2. Bricscad electrical software#
  3. Bricscad electrical trial#
  4. Bricscad electrical license#

We have completed several projects with Elecdes and we are very pleased with how easy it is to use.Įngineering Manager (Manufacturing, St Louis).I am using NanoCad Plus version 10 (not Pro, sorry for my mis-statement earlier) and it is almost time to renew. I was a little bit leery of using freeware from Russia at first, but I have had no problems with it and their development and support has been great. I think they have an electrical version in the works, but it is Russian last time I checked. The paid version has improvements like batch plotting and some other things that are different from the free version. My partners here who do less CAD work are still using the free version.

Bricscad electrical trial#

I started with the free version for a year or two, then I needed to renew during a holiday (the free trial has to be renewed via email) and didn't want to wait for the renewal so I decided I should just purchase it since I had made a lot of drawing$ using their hard work.I think I pay $180/year for 1 seat. I had used other clones before, but NanoCad is far and away the best of them I have tried. When I started here, I priced AutoCad LT and the sticker shock drove me to look for a clone. I have a shedload of blocks that I have built up over time as well as templates for our company. I can bring in blocks in AutoCad format from any vendor to save time doing panel layouts. Bear in mind it has been about 7 years since I used Autodesk software. The menu and customization look the same to me. There are tiny details in some of the fixed text items that might have some differences, but it is a very complete product. Does NanoCad use DWG format so I could easily import and edit Auto Cad projects? Would you mind elaborating what it is you like about Nano Cad verses Auto Cad? So yes the bulk of the work I would be doing would be add ons and edits to equipment from our integrators and the ones Ive spoken with all use AutoCad or AutoCadLt.

Bricscad electrical pro#

I've been using NanoCad pro for about 5 years now and like it much better than Autocad LT I've used thier software, and I wold avoid it, personally. Radica Electra has some decent symbols in DWG format that are free to download: I'm personally fond of a 2mm grid (I do my drawings in metric) with most text at 2.5mm and some at 2mm minimum (this is how some of the auto industry is doing schematics at the moment in Eplan) Scale the symbols to the grid pattern that works for you. Use a grid, and find or create a symbol library you like.

bricscad electrical

Bricscad electrical software#

IEC standards are also 11x17 (or A3 which is close), and most electronic schematic software works on a 0.1" grid (2.54mm - same as IEC which works on a 2.5mm grid) Most of the Auto industry has switched to Eplan, which is nice (but waaaay too expensive to be taken seriously) and at least has a good symbol library and fairly legible design standards (ie, 11x17 symbols as opposed to D size). You can completely re-do the symbol library and autocad electrical can be a very powerful tool, but it takes a lot of time to get to that point. That said, it is the standard and you do see many companies use it (not the auto industry anymore, ironically enough). Because Autocad is based in the auto industry, there are some pretty dumb and archaic standards built into autocad electrical - like "D" sized sheets and symbol libraries that, when printed on 11x17 or 8.5x11, are nearly illegible IMO.

bricscad electrical

On the subject of a 'good' symbol library, Autocad Electrical does not have one IMO.

Bricscad electrical license#

There are other autocad clones such as Bricscad (which offers a perpetual license and lisp, plugins, etc that autocad LT does not) or ZWcad. DWG is definitely the standard - so whatever you look for should be able to export to DWG.īasic autocad is fine if you have a good symbol library and can keep good documentation of the components you use.










Bricscad electrical