Moscow, 119361,
Russia
Triton Bikes Technographics
Discover the latest software purchases and digital transformation initiatives being undertaken by Triton Bikes and its business and technology executives. Each quarter our research team identifies on-prem and cloud applications that are being used by the 30 Triton Bikes employees from the public (Press Releases, Customer References, Testimonials, Case Studies and Success Stories) and proprietary sources.
During our research, we have identified that Triton Bikes has purchased the following applications: Altair solidThinking Inspire for Process Simulation in 2017 and the related IT decision-makers and key stakeholders.
Our database provides customer insight and contextual information on which enterprise applications and software systems Triton Bikes is running and its propensity to invest more and deepen its relationship with Altair Engineering or identify new suppliers as part of their overall Digital and IT transformation projects to stay competitive, fend off threats from disruptive forces, or comply with internal mandates to improve overall enterprise efficiency.
We have been analyzing Triton Bikes revenues, which have grown to $5.0 million in 2024, plus its IT budget and roadmap, cloud software purchases, aggregating massive amounts of data points that form the basis of our forecast assumptions for Triton Bikes intention to invest in emerging technologies such as AI, Machine Learning, IoT, Blockchain, Autonomous Database or in cloud-based ERP, HCM, CRM, EPM, Procurement or Treasury applications.
PLM and Engineering
Vendor |
Previous System |
Application |
Category |
Market |
VAR/SI |
When |
Live |
Insight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Altair Engineering | Legacy | Altair solidThinking Inspire | Process Simulation | PLM and Engineering | n/a | 2017 | 2017 |
In 2017, Triton Bikes implemented Altair solidThinking Inspire for Simulation Driven Design. CML AT, a Saint-Petersburg integrator specializing in additive technologies, partnered on the engagement to apply simulation-driven design methods to a targeted part redesign project for Triton Bikes.
The implementation focused on the rear yoke, the titanium frame component that links the rear chainstays and the bottom bracket, with an explicit structural requirement to withstand a 130 kg load. Triton Bikes Altair solidThinking Inspire Simulation Driven Design work targeted product engineering and manufacturing engineering goals, namely weight reduction, increased strength, simplified production technology, and reduced part cost for custom titanium bicycle and unicycle frames.
Engineers used Altair solidThinking Inspire’s topology optimization and structural simulation workflows to define load cases, constrain design regions, and iterate on lightweight geometries consistent with titanium material behavior. The work followed an iterative design, simulate, and refine pattern typical of Simulation Driven Design, producing manufacturable geometry tailored to additive manufacturing principles and conventional fabrication where required.
CML AT provided design-for-additive-manufacturing guidance and collaborated with Triton’s engineering team on verification planning and prototype validation steps as part of the delivery. Governance was organized around a focused product development project, with engineering sign-off gates tied to structural verification against the specified 130 kg load and manufacturability checks for downstream production.
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