There are lots of videos, online training, books, and classes available, for all kinds of subjects. I believe that Mastercam has arguably the best training and educational resources in the CAM market today. It costs a good bit of money, but you (generally) get what you pay for. Even for very complex machines, and you can do a ton of customization to fit your shop's needs.
There are plenty of off-the-shelf posts, and post development resources available. Here are the reasons I would stick with Mastercam, if it were my money to spend, and my business to run: That bill will come every year, or every month, and they can shut you down if you don't pay.
#Hsmworks vs mastercam license
Not to say they won't be offering a good "service", but you no longer have perpetual license to their product. What's stopping them, once you've bought into their platform, paid for posts, and training? Nothing. All of a sudden, you may go from $25 per license, per month, to $250. Plus, what happens when they jack up the price? Now your cheap license will cost more, as they start rolling out new functions and features.
#Hsmworks vs mastercam how to
You can bet the Chinese or Russians will have already figured out how to break into those vaults and plunder everything. I could see data management being a big deal for many shops, especially Military and Aerospace. You can use it "offline", but it will eventually want to "sync" with the home base at some point. So your data has to travel to Autodesk servers at some point. Call it a hunch.)įusion 360 will only be cloud based. (I think that is their plan, but have no inside knowledge of the inner workings of Autodesk. Eventually they will simply kill Powermill, and force those users into Fusion 360. I think they will only offer "cloud" based licenses, no more perpetual licensing. They also own Delcam, and if you've seen what they are doing there, they are basically discontinuing development of Powermill. What I mean by this is they are plugging in HSMWorks to Inventor, or Solidworks. Even though Mastercam Horizontal machining leaves a lot to be desired, it is still light years ahead of Fusion 360.Īutodesk also has several different "competing" products now for CAM. If you're doing any kind of 4X work, especially Horizontal, don't waste your time. I think it is good for Hobby use, but I'd be really careful about thinking you can run a shop with it.