As controls projects become more complex, the disconnect between mechanical and electrical design becomes harder to manage. Electrical schematics, panel layouts, and mechanical enclosures are often developed in parallel, but without reliable synchronization, small changes can quickly create costly conflicts.
Autodesk® offers an Electro/Mechanical Connector (EMX) that can help with this. Autodesk EMX integration addresses this challenge by connecting AutoCAD® Electrical and Inventor into a coordinated workflow. Instead of relying on manual communication and static handoffs, EMX enables more reliable mechanical electrical design coordination, helping teams identify issues earlier and reduce downstream rework.
This article explains how EMX supports electro-mechanical integration in practice and where it delivers the most value.
In traditional workflows, electrical and mechanical teams exchange information through drawings, spreadsheets, or meetings. While this approach may work early on, it becomes fragile as designs evolve. Enclosure changes, component sizing updates, or layout adjustments can quickly invalidate earlier assumptions.
Without strong coordination, teams often encounter:
These issues aren’t caused by lack of expertise; they’re caused by disconnected tools.
EMX integration with Autodesk Inventor® enables electrical and mechanical data to move between disciplines in a controlled, intentional way. Electrical components defined in AutoCAD Electrical can be synchronized with Inventor, while mechanical context helps validate layout decisions earlier in the process.
This Inventor electrical integration allows teams to:
Rather than replacing existing workflows, EMX enhances them by improving visibility and coordination.
As projects grow, manual coordination becomes harder to sustain. More components, more revisions, and more stakeholders increase the risk of misalignment. Autodesk electro-mechanical integration helps teams manage this complexity by creating a shared understanding of design intent across disciplines.
With EMX integration, Inventor issues can be identified earlier—when they’re easier and less expensive to resolve. This improves schedule predictability and reduces the need for late-stage rework.
While EMX provides the technical foundation, successful implementation depends on workflow alignment. Teams need clear rules for when data is exchanged, how changes are managed, and how responsibilities are shared between mechanical and electrical groups.
Hagerman helps organizations apply this change in a way that supports real-world processes. From defining integration workflows to aligning standards and training teams, Hagerman focuses on making electro-mechanical coordination practical, repeatable, and sustainable.
If your organization is experiencing conflicts between mechanical and electrical designs, EMX—implemented thoughtfully—can help teams work together more effectively and deliver more predictable outcomes. Contact us today to learn more about how we can support your team through this process.