Ansys Your Product License Has Numerical Problem Size Limits Verified -

Seeing the text means your license is working exactly as intended. It is a signal that your current model fits within the bounds of your specific software tier, allowing you to proceed with your simulation.

Solid (3D) elements consume the node budget very quickly. Whenever possible, represent thin-walled structures with and long, slender components with Beam elements . This can reduce your node count by 80–90% without sacrificing accuracy. Localized Inflation and Sizing

If your part is symmetric, don't model the whole thing. Using allows you to model half, a quarter, or an eighth of the geometry, effectively doubling or quadrupling your allowable mesh density. Simplify Geometry Seeing the text means your license is working

When you initiate a solve, the software performs a . It counts the number of nodes and elements (for FEA) or cells (for CFD). If the count is within the allowed range, it prints this message as a "pass" notification and begins the calculation. 2. Common License Limits

If you believe your mesh is small but the error persists, the Ansys Learning Forum is the best place to post your project files for a license check. Using allows you to model half, a quarter,

Instead of a fine global mesh, use a coarse global mesh and apply or Inflation Layers only where the gradients are high (like at a bolt hole or a wing's leading edge). 4. Moving Beyond the Limits

If you are seeing the message in your output file or solver console, you have encountered the built-in "governor" of an Ansys academic or entry-level license. If you exceed these numbers

If you exceed these numbers, the solve will fail, and the message will change from "verified" to a "limit exceeded" error. 3. How to Manage Model Size

If your research or professional project requires a higher fidelity than the "verified" limits allow, you have three primary paths:

Understanding the "Ansys Product License Numerical Problem Size Limits Verified" Message