Aveva has
released its new Aveva Electrical software application, which the company
says is a feature-rich design solution for electrical
engineers and designers in the marine environment.
Pre-release
customer testing has demonstrated man-hour savings of up to 30
percent when compared to traditional design applications, Aveva says. As part of Aveva’s Integrated Shipbuilding strategy, the
company says, customers that deploy the new Aveva Electrical can
benefit from the ability to optimize their entire shipyard by improving the
design, planning and production process.
“Aveva
Electrical is very quick and easy to deploy, both on new projects and also on
refit projects where access to legacy data is essential,” says Bruce Douglas, Aveva’s senior VP, marketing and product strategy, in a company press
release. “We have worked with numerous marine customers to ensure the highest quality and accuracy of electrical data from design to
commissioning. This product enables electrical engineers to collaborate fully
across inter-discipline design to produce automated deliverables which are completely consistent and accurate. With its
advanced graphical user interface and sophisticated design rules, we believe
Aveva Electrical will quickly become the preferred choice for all sizes of
marine projects.”
“Used as part
Aveva’s Integrated Shipbuilding strategy customers can benefit from a total solution
that delivers the right information, right resource and
right material at the right time in the production process,” adds Dave
Wheeldon, with Aveva’s Chief Technology Office. “The Integrated Shipbuilding strategy enables effective information sharing and workflow management
from initial order enquiry to final commissioning. This strategy incorporates all of the Aveva Marine portfolio solutions
such as, Outfitting and Engineering, as well as Aveva Enterprise Resource
Management and Aveva Net. Customers ultimately achieve greater benefits from the most complete integrated solution, improving shipyard production efficiency and reducing cost.”