ALGOR ANNOUNCES NEW FEA TECHNOLOGY TO HELP ENGINEERS DESIGN PRODUCTS FASTER
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This graph shows the results of a comparison between
ALGOR’s sparse solver and its previous skyline solver for linear static
stress analysis. Engineers used one model, varying its size to increase
the number of equations in the analysis. The ratio of bandwidth to number
of equations in the study was held at a constant 13 percent. |
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PITTSBURGH, PA – February 26, 2002 – ALGOR, Inc., a leading maker of
software for mechanical engineers, announces new fast solvers for linear static
stress and steady-state heat transfer analyses that use sparse solver technology
to provide significantly faster processing times. This speed is especially
important when considering stress in any assembly model, such as a large CAD
model, or performing a heat transfer analysis involving body-to-body radiation
or forced convection.
"With the new solvers, engineers can analyze larger models in less time
and shorten the entire design process," said Michael L. Bussler, president
of Pittsburgh-based ALGOR, Inc. "Through these performance gains, engineers
can realize significant increases in productivity."
In a recent ALGOR study, engineers performed linear static stress analyses to
compare the new fast solver with the previous, more traditional type of solver.
This comparison showed that the new sparse solver completed 186,777 equations in
about seven minutes, more than 430 times faster than the approximately 3,011
minutes it took the traditional solver to complete the same number of equations.
The new solver calculated nearly one million equations in just under eight
hours.
"This new solver technology provides at least five times more analysis
productivity than the previous solver, which is especially noticeable in
analyses of large CAD assemblies," said Julian Holt, a mechanical
engineering consultant with CADFEM in Leicestershire, UK. "I look forward
to its implementation throughout ALGOR's entire FEA and MES [Mechanical Event
Simulation] software product line in the first quarter of 2002."
Customers with current software upgrade subscriptions can receive the
new sparse solver technology at no charge by requesting the latest updates for
the linear static stress and steady-state heat transfer products. The software
is available for PC workstations running Windows NT, Me, 98, 2000 or XP.
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