SOLIDWORKS Costing Overview
The tool helps designers make decisions based on the cost to manufacture and helps manufacturers create quotes for customers. Whenever you change a design, you can see the new, updated cost immediately, along with a detailed cost breakdown. In addition, you can generate automatic cost reports.
Manufacturing and material information in templates drives the Costing tool to determine the manufacturing cost. In the templates, you can specify the material for the part, the manufacturing processes (laser cutting, bending, or milling), the manufacturing method (machining, casting, plastic molded, 3D printed), and the costs of these selections. The templates also let you create custom operations such as packaging, ERP entry, painting, or cleaning.
- Designers: Costing provides
cost
estimates
for
manufacturing
parts. Costing can compare models so you can make decisions
based on cost earlier in the design process. You can try “what
if” scenarios such as removing features, changing materials, and using
different manufacturing processes to see how these affect the cost. The cost estimates are repeatable because the results are based on data in the templates, so you always use the same template information to calculate costs.You can estimate the cost of a part with minimal reliance on the templates. You can also estimate part costs based on the cost per volume removed.
- Manufacturers: Costing creates accurate quotes based on the materials,
processes, and other associated costs that are required to manufacture parts.
Costing creates a faster quote process than manual methods such as using
spreadsheets, counting features, or estimating material removed.
Costing helps eliminate errors and provides an accurate, repeatable quoting system that you can update whenever material or labor costs need revision.
You can apply the Costing tool to estimate the cost of sheet metal, machined, plastic molded, cast, 3D printed, multibody parts, weldments, and assemblies:
Sheet metal parts |
Costing operations include the following:
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Machined parts |
Machined parts start as a block of material or a plate stock of material (such as metal plates or cylinders). Machined parts are drilled, milled, or turned, and then cut by a water jet or plasma to create the final shape. When you calculate the cost of machining a block-shaped or cylindrical stock body, the Costing tool incorporates the cost of the following:
Parts made from plates incorporate manufacturing techniques such as laser, water jet, and plasma cutting, in addition to milling or drilling. When you calculate the cost of machining a stock plate, the Costing tool incorporates the cost of the following:
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Casted Parts |
To cost casted parts, the SOLIDWORKS Costing software:
Due to cost variance, you provide the cost of tooling (or the mold) directly.
SOLIDWORKS Costing determines:
Casted parts use the machining template to determine costs.
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Plastic Molded Parts |
To cost plastic molded parts, the SOLIDWORKS Costing software:
Due to cost variance, you provide the cost of tooling (or the mold) directly.
There are two runner systems available:
Presets are defined in the template for each type of runner system.
SOLIDWORKS Costing determines:
Plastic molded parts use the machining template to determine costs.
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3D Printed Parts |
To cost 3D printed parts, the SOLIDWORKS Costing software:
You must add any additional cost for support material.
SOLIDWORKS Costing determines:
3D printed parts use the machining template to determine costs.
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Assemblies |
Assemblies include a combination of sheet metal parts and machined parts. You can calculate the total cost of the assembly by calculating the cost of all parts individually and adding them together with all hardware and other purchased component costs. The Costing tool summarizes costs for:
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Weldments |
Weldments include multibody weldments and single-body structural members. The Costing tool:
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