Victoria, BC, Canada, Tuesday 4th
October 2005
Albacore Research Ltd. (ARL), the
creator of the 3D product modeling software
ShipConstructor and Industrial Planning Technology,
Inc. (IPT) are cooperating on the development of a
translator that will enable ShipConstructor to import
and export STEP files containing pipe, HVAC, and
equipment data. This technology will significantly
enhance ShipConstructor’s interoperability in large
shipyard environments, allow organizations to more
easily access legacy data, and simplify the long term
storage and retrieval of archival product model data
throughout the entire product lifecycle. IPT is
developing the translators using the all-new
ShipConstructor Application Programming Interface (API)
creating intelligent distributed system objects directly
in the ShipConstructor Product Model Database.
STEP, part of the International
Organization for Standardization (ISO), is an
international, non-proprietary standard for the exchange
of product model data. Its intent is to help reduce the
costs and improve the quality of data translation
throughout a product’s lifecycle, between different
organizations involved in the product’s lifecycle, and
between physically dispersed sites within an
organization. STEP was first introduced in 1994 and is
now widely used by many of the world’s largest
manufacturers.
Recognizing the importance of STEP
to the shipbuilding industry, the Office of Naval
Research (ONR) and the National Shipbuilding Research
Program (NSRP) awarded a Small Business Innovation
Research (SBIR) grant to IPT in May. The goal is to
develop a set of software tools that use STEP to help
reduce the costs of pipe production for ships. Foremost
among these tools is the development of STEP
import/export capabilities for ShipConstructor, the
design software-of-choice for the NSRP’s Second-Tier
Shipyard Design Enhancement Program.
Subcontracting between shipyards
can reduce total construction costs by levelling
workloads and maximizing the use of automated equipment.
However, current methods of subcontracting piping
involve the use of paper drawings, resulting in
substantial delays, costs, and errors. For Naval
vessels, piping represents more than twenty five percent
of ship construction costs, so increasing the efficiency
of pipe subcontracting can result in significant
savings.
Initially, IPT will develop a
translator that enables ShipConstructor to import and
export STEP files containing pipe, HVAC, and equipment
data. IPT will also develop complementary tools that
allow pipe shops to use STEP data most effectively.
Subsequent development of the translator will focus on
additional data types, such as ship hull molded forms
and ship structures.
Unlike other file formats and data
transfer mechanisms, the STEP format can support an
unlimited range of data, including geometry, topology,
tolerances, relationships, attributes, assemblies,
configuration, and more. By overcoming the limitations
of proprietary CAD formats, STEP can provide a seamless
exchange of product model data between design, analysis,
and manufacturing systems. STEP can also help an
organization unlock its wealth of legacy data, by acting
as a reliable data transfer mechanism between older,
proprietary CAD systems and modern, product modeling
systems like ShipConstructor.
The STEP translator will be
released as an integrated component of ShipConstructor
in the spring of 2006.
For further information regarding
Industrial Planning Technology go to
www.Planning-Technology.com.