When it comes to large simulation tasks (in terms of geometry complexity), this release has a few tricks up its sleeve. This enables users to take their own assets and publish them for others to take advantage of, perhaps bringing them into Workbench as entities on their own or even distributing them publically through an app store like approach. The last few releases have seen the ACT (Ansys Customisation Template) environment start to flesh out. Workbench rewrote the book on how Ansys users interacted with the underlying technology, but it’s also the case that longtime users have a lot of experience and knowledge built into scripts, automation routines and other in-house developed items. So, while we haven’t the room to explore everything that’s up to date and new in this release, let’s step through some of the big ticket items and see where Ansys Workbench is heading with the 15.0 release.
![ansys 15 kickass ansys 15 kickass](http://i853.photobucket.com/albums/ab93/hdaniel85/hacktokenninjasagafiddler.jpg)
It’s a simple, very basic, example, but it shows how the system handles much of the grunt work that analysts could spend days on - just trying to get data from one simulation ‘type’ to another.
![ansys 15 kickass ansys 15 kickass](https://hmkzipper.com/thumb/640x440/2/upload/product/dau-keo-nonlock-so-3-n36_486749525390.jpg)
Any updates back at that initial ‘block’ can then be propagated into those solves,īe they structural linear problems, CFD or indeed, a mix of the two.
![ansys 15 kickass ansys 15 kickass](https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4066/35556184111_d3dd036e8c_o.png)
The clever part is how Workbench is handling the transformation and repurposing of that data.Ī good example is using a geometry import handling ‘block’ then using this to feed geometry into multiple solve ‘types’.