

Livrarea Comenzilor
Comenzile primite in ziua respectivă se livrează a doua zi calendaristică.
Comenzile sunt livrate prin firma de curierat GLS Curier, livrarea făcându-se la adresa indicată de client, in ziua urmatoare lucratoare, dupa preluarea coletului, pe intreg teritoriul Romaniei intre orele 08:00 si 17:00, de Luni pana Vineri.
Transportul este gratuit in Romania la comenzi peste 100 lei.
Transportul international este suportat de client. Acesta isi poate alege mijlocul de transport care este cel mai convenabil.

1. Ramburs (numerar la curier)
La livrare, puteţi achita contravaloarea produselor şi serviciilor comandate.
2. Transfer bancar / Internet Banking (procesarea comenzii se face dupa confirmarea platii de catre banca,poate dura 2-3 zile)
3. Plata prin card
Plata prin card este disponibilă pentru comenzile online şi poate fi efectuată prin carduri tip:
Cardul prin care se face plata trebuie să fie emis sub sigla Visa/Mastercard.
Plata prin card se face prin intermediul mobilPay, un serviciu securizat de plăţi online prin card, efectuându-se printr-o pagină securizată, eliminând astfel posibilitatea unor fraude.
Puteţi efectua plata prin card după plasarea comenzii, alegând la “Metoda de plată” opţiunea numită “Plata prin card”.
După plasarea comenzii prin intermediul butonului “Trimite comanda” o să fiţi redirecţionaţi pe pagina efectuării plăţii prin card, unde trebuie să completaţi datele de pe card şi numele deţinătorului pentru a putea plăti.
Pe această pagină trebuie să completaţi numărul cardului, de pe faţa acestuia, data expirării, codul CVV2 / CVC (de regulă ultimele 3 cifre tipărite pe spatele cardului).
După verificarea datelor şi a sumei de plată puteţi incheia tranzacţia printr-un click pe butonul “Plătesc în siguranţă”.
Third, . If you find yourself creating the same geometric pattern—a specific boss with four ribs and a counterbored hole, for example—do not rebuild it each time. Instantiate a PowerCopy or save it as a UDF. This not only saves time but ensures consistency across an assembly.
Second, . By default, CATIA creates features like “Pad.1,” “Pocket.2,” or “Hole.3.” In a model with fifty features, finding the right one to edit is a guessing game. Rename each feature descriptively (e.g., “Base_Pad_40mm,” “Bolt_Hole_M6,” “Right_Side_Fillet_2mm”) directly in the tree. This practice pays immense dividends when revisiting a model after weeks or when another designer inherits your work. catia tips
CATIA’s file structure (using .CATPart, .CATProduct, .CATDrawing) requires discipline. when opening an assembly. Always use “Open” with the “Load referenced documents” option set to “All” or “Load by Default” based on your project’s top-down assembly structure. Understand the difference between “Save,” “Save As,” and “Save Management.” Using “Save Management” is essential when copying an entire product to a new location or version; it allows you to remap all parts and sub-assemblies simultaneously, preventing broken links. Third,
Working with large assemblies is where CATIA’s performance can either shine or stall. A critical tip is to . While it is tempting to create a part directly within an assembly using external references, overuse creates circular dependencies and “broken links.” Instead, when you need to reference another part’s geometry, use “Publish” elements. Publishing creates stable, named reference elements (points, lines, surfaces) that resist breaking when the source part is updated, unlike a direct “Keep Link” which can break if the source geometry’s ID changes. This not only saves time but ensures consistency
Introduction
Finally, from the Analysis menu. This scans for stability issues, unresolved constraints, and corrupted geometry. Run this before any major release or design freeze to catch errors early.
Mastering CATIA is a journey of continuous learning, but efficiency is built on small, consistent habits. By fully constraining sketches, naming features, using PowerCopy for repetition, prioritizing assembly constraints, maintaining clean surfaces, customizing navigation, and practicing disciplined file management, a designer can reduce error rates, cut design time significantly, and produce more robust, reusable models. These tips are not just tricks; they are the difference between surviving in CATIA and truly commanding its immense potential. As with any complex craft, the goal is not just to model a part, but to model it with foresight, clarity, and elegance.