Cimatron Now a Global Reseller of Altair’s Inspire Mold and Inspire Form
Cimatron now offers Altair Inspire’s injection molding and metal forming simulation solutions.
Source | Cimatron
Altair (Nasdaq: ALTR), a global leader in computational intelligence, has appointed Cimatron, part of Sandvik Group, as a new global channel partner.
Cimatron will amplify the reach of Altair's unique design and simulations solutions within the Altair HyperWorks platform. These solutions – particularly Altair's injection molding and metal forming solutions, Altair Inspire Mold and Altair Inspire Form – are designed to revolutionize the manufacturing industry.
"The collaboration will introduce Altair technology to customers that might not currently be using any simulation or data analytics tools, helping them compete more effectively in a global marketplace defined by cutting-edge digital transformation. Cimatron is an outstanding addition to our channel partner ecosystem, and we look forward to seeing how customers in the manufacturing space will benefit from this partnership,” says Pavan Kumar, senior vice president, global indirect business of Altair.
"Cimatron has deep roots in the global mold, tool, and die business. Our customers have been searching for modern tools to validate their tool designs to reduce the time and costs of physical tryouts. Combining Cimatron's and Altair's technology will boost customer productivity and help users create higher quality, more efficient products for all manufacturing sectors,” says Dan Marinac, acting president of Cimatron.
Cimatron searched for the ideal fit to bring “virtual prove out” to its world-class mold and die design solutions. Enabling digital twin means modeling, simulating, improving and exploring design alternatives. Predicting and avoiding manufacturing defects such as filling, packing, sink marks, meld/weld lines, cooling, warpage, windage, forming, cracks/splits, wrinkles, surface defects and springback will save our customers time and money. Altair’s technology reduces the learning curve and puts the power of simulation into the hands of toolmakers without the need for CAE specialists,” says Marinac.