
CAESAR II
Oil and gas simulation and modeling software
Oil and gas software
Gas distribution software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
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What is CAESAR II
CAESAR II is a pipe stress analysis and piping system modeling software used to evaluate piping flexibility, loads, and code compliance for industrial facilities. It is commonly used by piping stress engineers and EPC organizations to analyze static and dynamic load cases (e.g., thermal expansion, weight, pressure, wind, seismic) and to generate calculation reports for design review. The product focuses on mechanical integrity and piping code checks rather than process simulation or hydraulic network optimization.
Strong pipe stress workflows
CAESAR II centers on piping stress analysis tasks such as modeling supports, restraints, expansion joints, and equipment nozzle loads. It supports common engineering workflows for defining load cases and combinations and reviewing stresses, displacements, and support reactions. This makes it well-aligned to mechanical piping design deliverables compared with tools that primarily focus on process or hydraulic simulation.
Broad code compliance support
The software is widely used for piping code compliance checks and reporting in regulated industrial environments. It includes code-checking and documentation outputs that fit typical EPC and owner-operator review processes. This emphasis on traceable calculations differentiates it from general-purpose modeling/visualization tools that do not provide piping code checks.
Ecosystem for piping engineering
CAESAR II is part of a broader set of engineering analysis tools from the same vendor, which can simplify procurement and standardization for engineering teams. Organizations often use it alongside related mechanical integrity and design tools, enabling more consistent methods and reporting across projects. This can reduce tool sprawl compared with assembling multiple point solutions for adjacent engineering analyses.
Not a hydraulic network simulator
CAESAR II is not designed for steady-state or transient fluid network simulation, compressor/valve control logic, or distribution system optimization. Teams needing pipeline hydraulics, surge analysis, or gas distribution operational modeling typically require separate specialized software. As a result, it may not satisfy requirements labeled as “gas distribution software” beyond mechanical piping stress considerations.
Steep learning curve
Accurate pipe stress modeling requires specialized domain knowledge (boundary conditions, support modeling, load case definition, and interpretation of results). New users can produce misleading results if modeling assumptions are incorrect, which increases the need for training and internal standards. This can slow adoption compared with more guided simulation tools aimed at broader engineering audiences.
Data exchange can be project-specific
Integrating piping models with 3D plant design systems and maintaining synchronization across design changes can require careful setup and disciplined processes. Data exchange quality depends on project configuration, naming conventions, and model governance rather than being fully automatic. This can add overhead in fast-changing projects where piping geometry and supports evolve frequently.
Seller details
Hexagon AB
Stockholm, Sweden
1982
Public
https://www.hexagon.com/
https://x.com/hexagonab
https://www.linkedin.com/company/hexagon-ab