CNCCookbook 2021 CAMSurvey
CNCCookbook 2021 CAMSurvey
CNCCookbook 2021 CAMSurvey
CNCCookbook
CAM
Survey
Results
Bob Warfield
E very year CNCCookbook surveys readers on their CAM Software. The results are a unique and
invaluable guide to CAM for the CNC World.
Product Managers at a variety of CADCAM companies, large and small, tell me they find the
results very valuable in their own planning. There’s really no other source of information quite like
these surveys, so I wanted to get these initial results out as soon as I could.
We’ve done these CAM surveys in 2010, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020 and now
2021, so there is historical data to compare against when looking for trends. Note that the 2021
results are actually 2020, we just felt it would look funny to publish 2020 in 2021, especially given we
conducted the survey at the beginning of 2021.
Tiered: Modular packages available in a range of configurations that span from the Low-End to the
High-End.
Low-End: These are inexpensive packages often used by Hobbyists, but as we’ll see, at least one
package has come up-market to the Professional World.
2021 CNCCookbook
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CAM Segments
CAM Breakdown by Segment
2021 CNCCookbook CAM Survey
8%
39%
53%
T
his year, High End CAM was 39% of our responses, Tier-priced CAM is at 53%, and the Low End is at 8%.
These numbers are basically unchanged from last year’s results.
Whereas last year’s numbers reflected some loss of share of the High End to Fusion 360, this year’s
numbers show that trend has stopped, at least for now.
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CAM Market Share by Segment:
High End
High End CAM Market Share
CNCCookbook 2021 CAM Survey
Mastercam 29.2%
28.9%
SolidCam 9.5%
7.9%
Powermill 3.2%
6.1%
Gibbscam 7.0%
6.1%
Camworks 7.6%
6.1%
NX 8.3%
5.3%
Hypermill 1.9%
5.3%
Surfcam 1.9%
3.5%
Edgecam 4.4%
3.5%
Delcam 1.9%
3.5%
WorkNC 0.6%
2.6%
VisiCAM 0.6%
2.6%
EstlCAM 1.9%
2.6%
Esprit 3.8%
2.6%
PTC Pro/E 1.3%
1.8%
FeatureCAM 1.3%
1.8%
Catia 0.6%
1.8%
TopSolid 0.9%
Radab 0.9%
Pro/NC 0.9%
NCG Cam Solutions 0.9%
Microvellum 0.9%
Cimatron 0.9%
CabinetVision 0.9%
Artcam 0.9%
Alphacam 2.5%
0.9%
0.0% 5.0% 10.0% 15.0% 20.0% 25.0% 30.0% 35.0%
2020 2021
T
his year, High End CAM market share is still led by Mastercam, which has an overall (not just high end
share) share of 28.9%. Last year they had 29.2% share, so they’ve contracted a bit.
In second place we have SolidCam at 7.9%, down from last year’s 9.5%. And in third place, PowerMill
has risen from 3.2% to 6.1%.
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CAM Market Share:
Tiered Segment
Tiered Segment CAM Market
2021 CNCCookbook CAM Survey
45.1%
Fusion360
45.5%
24.2%
Vectric / Aspire
20.5%
11.2%
BobCAD/CAM
10.3%
8.4%
HSMWorks (Non Fusion 360)
8.3%
0.0%
Inventorcam
4.5%
5.1%
Mecsoft (Visual and RhinoCAM)
3.8%
3.3%
SprutCam
2.6%
0.9%
OneCNC
2.6%
0.5%
EZCam
1.9%
0.0% 5.0% 10.0% 15.0% 20.0% 25.0% 30.0% 35.0% 40.0% 45.0% 50.0%
2020 2021
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CAM Market Share:
Low End
2020 2021
CamBam remains #1 and even grabbed share to rise from 24% to 33%. MeshCam lost a little share,
moving from 15% to 12%.
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CNCCookbook
CAM Software
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Overall CAM Market Share
Overall CAM Market Share
CNCCookbook
2021 2020
CNCCookbook CAMSurvey
Survey
Fusion360
Fusion360 24.0%
24.0%
24.1%
Aspire /Mastercam
Vectric 11.4%
11.2%12.8%
Mastercam
Vectric / Aspire 10.9% 12.8%
11.4%
BobCAD/CAM
BobCAD/CAM 5.9%
5.9%
5.4%
HSMWorks (Non Fusion
HSMWorks (Non Fusion 360)360) 4.4%
4.4%
4.4%
SolidCam
SolidCam 3.7%
3.7%
3.1%
Type3
CamBam 2.0%3.5%
2.7%
NX
Powermill 1.2% 3.2%
2.4%
Camworks
Inventorcam 3.0%
2.4%
VisualMill / Mecsoft
Gibbscam 2.7%
2.7%
2.4%
Gibbscam 2.7% 3.0%
Camworks 2.4%
CamBam 2.0% 3.2%
NX 2.0%
SprutCam 1.7% 2.7%
Mecsoft (Visual and RhinoCAM)
Edgecam 1.7%2.0%
0.7%
Hypermill
Esprit 1.5% 2.0%
0.7%
Surfcam 1.4%
SheetCam 1.2%
SprutCam 1.7%
1.4%
Powermill 1.2%
OneCNC 0.5%1.4%
MeshCam 1.2%
Edgecam 1.7%
Alphacam 1.0%1.4%
Delcam 0.7%
Surfcam 0.7% 1.4%
WorkNC 0.2%
Hypermill 0.7%1.0%
VisiCAM 0.2%
EstlCam 0.7%1.0%
MeshCam 1.2%
Delcam 0.7%1.0%
EZCam 0.2%
Conversational (PathPilot) 0.7%1.0%
EstlCAM 0.5%0.7%
PTC Pro/E 1.0%
OneCNC Esprit 0.5% 1.0% 1.5%
FeatureCAM ZW3D 0.5% 0.2%
0.7%
PTC Pro/E 0.5%
DolphinCAM 0.5%
0.7%
FeatureCAM
Desk Proto 0.5%
0.5%0.7%
ZW3D Catia 0.2%0.2%
0.7%
Carveco 0.2%0.7%
WorkNC
TopSolid 0.2%
WardCam 0.3%
Solidworks
VisiCAM CAM 0.2% 0.2%
0.3%
UnigraphicsRadab 0.2% 0.3%
SwiftCam
Prototrak 0.2% 0.3%
Solidworks Cam Pro/NC 0.2% 0.3%
NCG Router-CIM
Cam Solutions 0.2% 0.3%
Partmaker
Microvellum 0.2% 0.3%
Okuma Admac Parts
DolphinCAM 0.2%0.5%
0.3%
Millwrite
Desk Proto 0.2% 0.5%
0.3%
MakerCam
Cimatron 0.2% 0.3%
MADCam
Centroid 0.2% 0.3%
Kcam
Carbide 4
Create 0.2%
0.3%
JSCut
Candle 0.2% 0.3%
HeeksCamotics
Cam 0.2%
0.3%
EZCam
CabinetVision 0.2%
0.3%
EnRoute
Artcam 0.2% 0.3%
Catia
Alphacam 0.2% 1.0%
0.3%
Cad Key
Alibre CAM 0.2% 0.3%
0.0% 5.0% 10.0% 15.0% 20.0% 25.0% 30.0%
0.0% 5.0% 10.0% 15.0% 20.0% 25.0% 30.0%
2020 2021
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Overall Share Analysis
Looking at overall share for 2021, we can see just how much Fusion360, Aspire/Vectric, and Mastercam
dominate the CAM world. Here are the highlights:
- While still at the top, Fusion360 hasn’t grown overall share by much and neither has MasterCam.
- CamBam is up a pretty good tick from 2.0% to 2.7%. This may reflect interest in packages that are
simpler to use than F360 at a time when F360 prices are rising from free.
- Powermill, a former customer satisfaction winner in these surveys, is solidly up from 1.2 to 2.4%.
In general, there’s been a fair amount of fluctuation in share, but it’s hard to say exactly what’s driving it.
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CAM Market Share:
CNC Routers
CNC Routers are often used quite differently than CNC Mills. In particular, they do a lot more artistic work
such as signs and corporate logos. It’s not surprising, therefore, that the Aspire / Vectric software dominates
this segment.
Compared to last year’s survey, there is a lot more variety. That likely reflects CNCCookbook gaining a lot more
CNC Router users in our readership. The leaders on this chart are relatively unchanged except that Type3
dropped off.
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CAM Software
Survey
Customer Satisfaction Awards
Which packages did customers love the most? There’s a lot more detail in the eBook (see
below), but here are the winners.
Tied for first place with very close scores are PowerMill and HyperMill:
Congratulations to the PowerMill team! This marks the second time PowerMill took the gold as they also had it in 2016.
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Congratulations to the HyperMill team!
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Survey
Silver Awards
We think the customer satisfaction awards are a big deal as they represent actual user’s evaluation of the
software. After all, who would know more than actual users who live with a package day after day and use it to do their
work?
Here is the roster of Customer Satisfaction Award winners over the years:
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CAM Software
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Satisfaction Scores
Here’s the big chart of all customer satisfaction scores. Note that we only include packages below that had at
least 5 responses.
2020 2021
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CAM Software
Survey
CAM Software Gripes
Biggest CAM Software Gripes
CNCCookbook 2021 Survey
Wants Feature Recognition / Templates 0.9%
3D Toolpaths 2.1%
Slow 5.7%
Poor UX 17.0%
What are the biggest gripes users have with their CAM Software? You can see them laid out above.
Number one this year (up from 14% last year) is lack of power. Whether this is lack of a particular type of
toolpath or inability to control the paths enough, this is all about an inability to make the g-code do what the
user wants.
Poor UX (i.e. usability, user interface, hard to learn, hard to use) was second, and about the same as last year.
CAM is hard to learn and use, it seems.
Third was the builtin CAD or the CAD integration. The actual percentage of complaints is higher, almost 14% vs
about 12% last year.
Fourth was instability, though at 8%’ish was lower than the 12% reported last year.
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CAM Software Gripes (Cont’d)
Configurability is an interesting one. Shops want CAM to capture their best practices without having to
configure them manually over and over again.
Poor feeds and speeds also came up repeatedly, as it has in prior years. In general, CAM Feeds and Speeds are
mediocre at best. Get a stand alone Feeds and Speeds calculator like G-Wizard and you’ll do a lot better. In
fact, I’ll make a standing offer to all CAM companies—we’d love to work with you to integrate our world-class
feeds and speeds engine with your software.
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CAM Software
Survey
CAM Software Gripes: Part 2
This year, I am changing the format of how we will report the specific gripes for the top CAM packages.
Instead of a chart, I am just going to list the gripes that are over 10% of respondents for a package.
BobCAD/CAM
CamBam
Camworks
Fusion 360
- 26%: Poor UX
- 15%: Inefficient G-Code / Lack of Power
- 11%: Slow
Gibbscam
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CAM Software Gripes: Part 2
(cont’d)
HSMWorks (Non Fusion 360)
Hypermill
Inventorcam
- 29%: Poor UX
- 14%: Inefficient G-Code / Lack of Power
- 14%: Poor CAD or CAD Integration
- 14%: Too Expensive
- 14%: Poor Docs and Training
- 14%: Poor Simulation
Mastercam
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CAM Software Gripes: Part 2
(cont’d)
Siemens NX
- 44%: Poor UX
- 22%: Inefficient G-Code / Lack of Power
- 22%: Poor CAD or CAD Integration
- 11%: Poor Docs & Training
Powermill
SolidCam
Vectric/Aspire
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CAM Demographics
What type of CNC Work do you do?
CNCCookbook 2021 Survey
Plasma, 0.9%
EDM, 1.9%
Other, 2.1%
Laser, 0.7%
Waterjet, 0.5%
Milling, 50.5%
In terms of the type of CNC Work respondents are doing, the majority is CNC Milling, followed by Router
and Turning work. There’s a smattering of other activities that probably would’ve been larger had they been
actual choices on the survey rather than write-ins.
This year, 20.61% of respondents are considering new CAM Software to replace the package they
currently use. That’s way up from last year’s 17.81% of respondents.
Most were probably hunkered down and not looking to spend on anything unless absolutely required
during the Pandemic Year..
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Have you ever used Conversational Programming instead of CAM to save time?
45% of respondents have used Conversational Programming to save time over CAM. That score is down
from last year’s 45% result.
Conversational Programming is a time saving and simpler alternative to CADCAM for certain
jobs. I like to think of it as making it super easy to do all the sorts of things manual machinists do just
by filling out a quick wizard.
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Is your CAM Software integrated within your CAD Software?
65.1% of respondents said their CAM is integrated with their CAD. That score is down from last year’s
result of 68%.
Several folks wrote into the “Other” category that their CAM software was “associative” with their
CAD program. What that means is even though they don’t run together in the same window, making
changes to CAD are automatically reflected in CAM.
Results:
Being able to modify your CAM’s g-code can be a powerful tool. If your shop lacks this capability, you’re
missing out on a lot of opportunity to improve automation and profitability.
To get an idea what’s possible, check out 37 things your CAM won’t do for you that g-code programming
can. It will show you what’s possible with a little g-code programming added to CAM.
Change Offsets 8%
Other 18%
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As you can see, by far the most common change made to CAM-generated g-code is feeds and speeds.
Not surprising considering how poor CAM-generated Feeds and Speeds are rated in this survey..
Other activities include modifying the tool numbers (so you can load your tool changer differently),
general code cleanup, work offset-related changes, changing where the table stops at various points in
the program, and adding documentation so programs are more readable.
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How do you test or proof your CAM-generated programs?
Proofing programs to avoid crashes and other errors is critical before you run them on a machine. Here’s
how the survey respondents go about testing their programs:
- 17.92% Cut “air” on the machine (up from 13.41% last year)
- 62% run the code through the CAM simulator (down from 63.06% last year)
- 9.68% use a stand alone simulator (up from 8.71% last year)
Note that trusting the CAM Simulator is down. Most people do trust them. What can be more sexy than
watching that simulation? It’s full 3D and you’d swear it has to be accurate.
The issue is the way CAM program simulators work. If your CAM program includes a true CNC g-
code simulator, then yes, it can be used to help test g-code programs.
The thing is, most CAM programs don’t. They just plot the same geometry information that was
used to create the g-code output by the postprocessor. This allows for subtle bugs to creep in that are
not detectable in the CAM backplot.
For example, bugs in the post cannot be detected this way because the post is downstream of
that geometry info. In other words, you aren’t really performing an independent test on the g-code.
Relying on this type of simulator is fraught with peril.
Proving programs is just one of the reasons folks rely on our G-Wizard Editor software. We wrote
an article that details the sorts of problems a simulator like G-Wizard can eliminate from your
programs:
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