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Early-access pilots work best when the team brings one real assembly, one review question, and a clear deployment boundary.

Page summary

Who should request early access, what to provide, and how the first workflow is scoped.

Who should request access

  • Engineering leaders evaluating CAD-native AI review workflows.
  • CAD, simulation, manufacturing, safety, or ergonomics teams with a concrete assembly-level review bottleneck.
  • Enterprise architecture or security teams reviewing deployment feasibility.
  • Investors or diligence teams seeking a technical product review under appropriate confidentiality.

What to provide

  • Company and role.
  • Assembly domain and approximate scale.
  • Preferred starting agent or review question.
  • Available input artifacts: CAD export, tolerance spec, target zones, load case, or workflow notes.
  • Deployment requirements: local workstation, on-prem, private cloud, managed Kubernetes, or air-gapped discussion.
  • Security-review expectations and NDA requirements.

What happens next

Qualification
Quatrion reviews fit, workflow scope, and security/deployment needs.
Pilot scoping
The team selects one assembly and one starting workflow.
Architecture review
Deployment, CAD locality, object storage, identity, secrets, and model-provider boundaries are reviewed.
Workflow run
The selected agent is run against the encoded assembly and reviewed with geometry-linked evidence.

What can be shared under NDA

  • Detailed benchmark methodology and representative evidence.
  • Architecture diagrams and deployment review material.
  • Security boundary discussion.
  • Pilot workflow plan and success criteria.
  • SDK-preview details appropriate to the pilot scope.
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