On Wednesday, June 20, 2018 a webinar titled “Hierarchic Approaches to Modeling Fastened Connections” was provided by ESRD’s Brent Lancaster and Gordon Lehman.
In case you missed it, the webinar recording is now available!
ESRD is pleased to announce a new webinar, scheduled for April 22, 2021 @ 11:00 am EST.
This webinar, hosted by ESRD partner Revolution in Simulation, will present a case study in which the goal was the development of a mathematical model for supporting condition-based maintenance (CBM) decisions.
ESRD and Altair will be presenting a novel Aerospace & Defense (A&D) industry webinar, “Global-Local Workflows and High-Fidelity Stress Analysis for a Wing Flap Hinge Fitting”, on April 10th at 10:00 am EDT. Learn more […]
On April 10th, ESRD and Altair co-presented a novel Aerospace & Defense (A&D) industry webinar, “Global-Local Workflows and High-Fidelity Stress Analysis for a Wing Flap Hinge Fitting”. If you were not able to attend, don’t worry; the on-demand webinar is now available! […]
This past week at AA&S/PS&S 2019, ESRD’s Gordon Lehman provided a training course titled “How Do You Verify the Accuracy of Engineering Simulations?”, chatted with attendees about StressCheck and how it supports detailed aerostructures analyses, and exhibited at our colorful & engaging booth.
Read the summary of events and download the AA&S/PS&S training course presentation!
In this edition of S.A.F.E.R. Simulation Views we asked Brent Lancaster, ESRD’s Principal Support Engineer, about the basics of StressCheck Professional. Learn why it was developed, what it supports, how to master it, and more!
“The p-type element has been used to great advantage in the finite element system ESRD StressCheck, [26]. This software provides the engineer with the means to conduct solution verification in an extremely straightforward manner by simply increasing the degree of the element, monitoring convergence and using Richardson extrapolation reliably to estimate the error. This can be conducted automatically by the software thereby enabling the engineer to concentrate on the engineering rather than the simulation. StressCheck has also been used to develop ESRD’s Handbook and Toolbox applications. The first of these provides engineers with a repository of parameterised standard problems of the type found in texts like Roark’s “Formulas for Stress and Strain”, [27]. The second, Toolbox, is a tool that can be used to parameterise a company’s range of components for rapid and reliable analysis by non-expert analysis. Toolbox then is an exemplary of the way in which the democratisation of simulation can be applied.”