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"I might be too deep in this — is RapidDraft solving a real problem?" from Reddit r/saas, ranked #21. By Healthy-Ad7397, 1 score, 1 comments. Data from Daily Trends.

I might be too deep in this — is RapidDraft solving a real problem?

Rank
21
Subreddit
r/saas
Author
Healthy-Ad7397
Score
1
Comments
1
Posted
3/29/2026, 10:08:47 PM
Snapshot
3/30/2026, 12:00:00 AM

Links

Content

I’m building RapidDraft for mechanical/CAD teams. The pain I keep seeing is that design review comments, drawing notes, and manufacturing feedback end up scattered across PDFs, emails, PLM comments, and meetings. Then the model changes and a lot of the same work gets repeated. The idea is to keep that feedback attached to the CAD model and automate parts of the drawing/review workflow so teams catch issues earlier and do less rework. I’m not here to pitch it. I’m trying to figure out whether this is an actual painkiller or just a nice-to-have. For people who work in CAD, mechanical design, or manufacturing: 1. Does this sound like a real problem worth solving? 2. What would be most valuable: faster drawings, automated checks, or traceable review history? 3. Would your company pay for this, or would they just keep using the current mess? Brutal feedback is welcome.