riff_raff:
I think what you try to say is what I initially thought.
Let's put it into a little example.
A vehicle manufacturer has some design work to be done. They ask an engineering office for a designer (instead of recruiting a own one
, but thats a different story).
So they have to pay 100$/h for a class A designer and 50$/h for a normal CAT user but that’s not even close to the actual salary of the man. It is actually much lower. First the agency keeps 5% as you say, I think it’s even more like 9 or 10%.
Then the agency will also take part of the money for other expenses they have like buildings, wages of non designer, cars,...
Then most of the money is taken by the government for whatever reason.
Then you get an amount of money that is paid to the designer but here the government comes a second time to take something around 40% of the money.
In the end the designer gets some money that has little to do with the 100$/h that you stated in the beginning. I think some people got confused by this.
riff_raff wrote:
CATIA V5 is the CAD software used by most of the world's automotive OEM's. CATIA Generative Shape Design (GSD) is the base level surfacing module, and is not a Class A tool. CATIA V5 Class A tool is Vehicle Design/Styling & Class A.
Yea now I noticed that there is a special module called automotive class A.
I just wonder what is the difference between automotive class A and the shape design. In principle it should be the same or at least very similar.
Something else I am wondering about is that it seems to be like there are some programmes used by all those people here on the forum that present their self made F1 cars and there are the CAD programmes like CATIA.
It seems like it would be easier to make such a car with one of those “graphical programmes” than with a real CAT programme. You say less than 1% of CAD users can use class A but here on the forum it seems like every schoolboy can make his own F1 car.