| Software | Best For | The Trade-off | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Aerospace, Automotive, Shipbuilding | Steep learning curve. Very expensive. | | SolidWorks | Consumer goods, machine design | Struggles with complex surfacing. | | NX (Siemens) | Industrial machinery | Excellent, but less market share in aviation. | | Fusion 360 | Hobbyists, startups | Cannot handle massive assemblies (10k+ parts). | The Elephant in the Room: Is CATIA Dying? No. In fact, it is pivoting hard.
If a design has a flowing, organic curve—like a sports car’s fender or a yacht’s hull—CATIA built it. Its surface modeling tools allow "Class-A Surfacing," which defines the exact curvature needed for a piece of metal to reflect light perfectly.
Modern products aren't just metal. CATIA handles electrical wiring , hydraulic tubing , and carbon fiber composites . For aerospace, CATIA tells you exactly how to lay the carbon fiber sheets to withstand 30,000 pounds of thrust.
That project changed manufacturing forever. The 777 was the first commercial jetliner designed entirely on a computer without physical mock-ups. CATIA allowed thousands of engineers across the globe to work on the same digital airplane simultaneously. Today, that legacy continues with the Boeing 787 and the Airbus A350. Here are the features that make CATIA the undisputed king of heavy lifting: