by Rusty White » Sat Dec 10, 2011 11:00 pm
makulina wrote:Is it possible to learn AutoCad if you are not good at math and have minimal drawing skills? I am in sales and I am looking to change careers. A friend recommended I learn autocad. I am good with computers but I am not very good at math and I do not draw. There is a CAD school that I can attend at night. Is this something that is realistic for me to grasp?
If you are considering a career change as it seems you are, I would definitely suggest learning Auto Cad because it is the industry standard that most companies use. Is it the best? Personally, I don't think so. It's very user unfriendly for ease of learning. It's so difficult to learn, that you really need to attend formal classes to pick it all up. It can be self taught as our esteemed web master will say. However, I purchased a CD on line written by an Auto Cad professor that will teach everything you need to know. He teaches just like a classroom, with exercises after each chapter.
Like Dr PR, I use DesignCad 3D Max v-20. I agree with everything he says about it and will add that it is much easier to learn how to use with it's excellent help files, and user forum. Starting from NO CAD experience whatsoever, I was self taught and productive in the 2D part in 3 months. It does take more time to learn 3D, but once you learn the 2D part, you will already be familiar with most of the commands.
After another four months using 3D, I can now produce acceptable 3D instructions for my model kits
viewtopic.php?f=27&t=88739 . DC is much more user friendly than AC and just as capable as well as WAAAAAAAY cheaper. For hobby use, DC is my recommendation, but for professional use and finding a job, AC is the way to go ONLY because it has been accepted as the industry standard.
[quote="makulina"]Is it possible to learn AutoCad if you are not good at math and have minimal drawing skills? I am in sales and I am looking to change careers. A friend recommended I learn autocad. I am good with computers but I am not very good at math and I do not draw. There is a CAD school that I can attend at night. Is this something that is realistic for me to grasp?[/quote]
If you are considering a career change as it seems you are, I would definitely suggest learning Auto Cad because it is the industry standard that most companies use. Is it the best? Personally, I don't think so. It's very user unfriendly for ease of learning. It's so difficult to learn, that you really need to attend formal classes to pick it all up. It can be self taught as our esteemed web master will say. However, I purchased a CD on line written by an Auto Cad professor that will teach everything you need to know. He teaches just like a classroom, with exercises after each chapter.
Like Dr PR, I use DesignCad 3D Max v-20. I agree with everything he says about it and will add that it is much easier to learn how to use with it's excellent help files, and user forum. Starting from NO CAD experience whatsoever, I was self taught and productive in the 2D part in 3 months. It does take more time to learn 3D, but once you learn the 2D part, you will already be familiar with most of the commands.
After another four months using 3D, I can now produce acceptable 3D instructions for my model kits [url]http://www.shipmodels.info/mws_forum/viewtopic.php?f=27&t=88739[/url] . DC is much more user friendly than AC and just as capable as well as WAAAAAAAY cheaper. For hobby use, DC is my recommendation, but for professional use and finding a job, AC is the way to go ONLY because it has been accepted as the industry standard.