Key Takeaways
  • The real cost of missed revision changes
  • Why manual diff fails at scale
  • What DrawingDiff does differently
  • An illustrative scenario: 400-part gas delivery assembly
  • What DrawingDiff is not (yet)

Key Takeaway

In semiconductor equipment design, a “minor revision” routinely touches 40–80 parts — and missing one moved flange or swapped fitting costs $15k–$80k in rework. Manual drawing diff is error-prone: engineers compare rendered views, highlight changes in Excel, and sometimes just trust the rev letter on the title block. DrawingDiff is designed to automate this — upload two SolidWorks or STEP revisions and get a cited, traceable change list in roughly a minute.

The real cost of missed revision changes

We interviewed design teams at six equipment OEMs. The most common failure mode:

  1. Rev B is released with a small flange change — ANSI to ISO.
  2. Purchasing still orders against Rev A’s BOM because nobody flagged the change.
  3. Parts arrive. Wrong flanges.
  4. Assembly stalls 2–4 days. Overnight shipping for replacements. Downtime on test cell.
  5. Post-mortem: “the diff was done visually, and the flange change was on page 12 of a 40-page print set.”

The median cost of a single missed-change incident: $18,000. Severe cases with production stoppage: $80,000+. Most teams have 2–4 such incidents per year.

Why manual diff fails at scale

Engineers have three tools today, each with limits:

VISUAL COMPARE

Method: Open both revisions side-by-side, eyeball for differences.

Problem: Works for 10–20 parts. Fails at 100+. Small changes in hidden sub-assemblies never get seen.

BOM DIFF IN EXCEL

Method: Export both BOMs, diff in Excel, manually flag deltas.

Problem: Misses geometry-only changes (same part, moved 5mm). Doesn’t show WHY a part was swapped.

PDM SYSTEM HISTORY

Method: Rely on Enovia / Windchill / Teamcenter to track who changed what.

Problem: Logs micro-actions, not engineering intent. You get “user X saved file Y” — not “flange spec changed ANSI → ISO because pressure spec upgraded”.

What DrawingDiff does differently

Upload Rev A and Rev B (SolidWorks assemblies or STEP files). DrawingDiff produces four outputs in parallel:

  1. Geometric change map: every moved, rotated, resized, added, or deleted part — color-coded on an interactive 3D viewer. Click any changed part for before/after side-by-side.
  2. BOM delta table: added, removed, swapped parts with part numbers, quantities, and supplier information. Export straight to purchasing as a change order.
  3. Feature-level diff: for parts that changed internally (hole diameter, thread spec, material), DrawingDiff walks the feature tree and highlights the specific mod — not just “part changed”.
  4. Change rationale inference: reads your company’s PLM comments and linked ECOs to offer a short summary: “Flange upgrade correlates with pressure spec change in ECO-2304.” Not authoritative, but often enough to save the engineer a dig.

An illustrative scenario: 400-part gas delivery assembly

Illustrative model (not a customer deployment): consider a gas panel assembly of the kind shipped to semiconductor fabs. A typical assembly has 380–420 parts. A typical revision touches 40–90.

Before DrawingDiff: Senior engineer spends 3–4 hours doing manual compare. Prints both drawing sets, marks up with highlighter, transfers to Excel, circulates for sign-off. Misses ~2–5% of changes on a typical cycle.

With DrawingDiff (design targets): 45-second automated diff, 15-minute engineer review of flagged changes — designed to catch 100% of geometric deltas and 99% of feature-level changes (Design Target), and to flag human-reviewable ambiguities (e.g., part number renamed but specs identical).

Modeled outcome on these assumptions (not a measured customer result): 3+ hours saved per revision cycle and 2–3 missed-change incidents per year avoided, each worth $18k+ at the rework costs cited above.

What DrawingDiff is not (yet)

  • Not a PDM replacement — it plugs in alongside your existing Enovia / Windchill / Teamcenter.
  • Not a full 3D renderer — we use lightweight WebGL; for photorealistic marketing renders, use SolidWorks Visualize.
  • Not magic for badly-organized CAD — if your team doesn’t use sub-assemblies consistently, DrawingDiff’s output reflects that. Garbage in, garbage out.

Stop missing changes in your revisions

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Learn more at DrawingDiff on MST.

MST
MST Technical Team
Written by Moore Solution Technology (MST) for customers evaluating mature-node MPW, P&ID-to-native-SOLIDWORKS workflows, equipment integration, and RFQ preparation. Public guidance starts with non-confidential scope; sensitive design files should move only through the proper review path.