Aveva E3d 3.1 -
The survey team scans the existing FPSO topside. The 500GB point cloud is imported into E3D 3.1.
Using E3D’s alignment tools, the scan is registered against the original design coordinates. aveva e3d 3.1
A piping designer routes a new 8" chemical injection line. Because E3D 3.1 sees the point cloud as geometry, the line automatically avoids the existing structural steel. The designer receives a real-time notification: "Clearance to existing valve: 45mm (Requires 50mm)." The designer nudges the route by 5mm, and the warning clears. The survey team scans the existing FPSO topside
However, for organizations that have invested in PDMS previously, upgrading to E3D 3.1 is a low-risk, high-reward move. The automated isometrics alone typically pay for the licensing fees within a single project lifecycle. A piping designer routes a new 8" chemical injection line
Its strengths lie in (no corrupt DWG files), scalability (thousands of users working simultaneously), and brownfield capability (laser scan draping). The weaknesses are the steep learning curve and the need for a dedicated database administrator (DBA).
Enter . As one of the most significant releases in the history of AVEVA’s engineering design suite, version 3.1 represents a maturation of the industry’s leading 3D design platform. Released to address the growing demands of cloud collaboration and laser scan integration, E3D 3.1 is not merely an upgrade; it is a paradigm shift in how global teams execute capital projects.