Made in NYC 3/10/2021 Featuring #Adafruit #RP2040 #Feathers and #STEMMA Soil Sensors

Made in NYC 3/10/2021 Featuring RP2040 Feathers and STEMMA Soil Sensors

Bare panel of RP2040 Feather boards (0:04) & audio followup (1:10)

Panel of RP2040 Feathers exits PnP machine (0:15)

Inspecting RP2040 Feathers before reflow (0:22)

3d printer making more surgical mask ear savers (0:30)
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:4249113

Making a giant batch of Soil Sensors (0:38)

Component rack at sunset (1:34)

Delivery of rebar to construction site (1:57)

Sunset behind stencil machine (2:10)

Sunset looking north (2:15)

See more Made in NYC!

A teacher who turned his home into a PPE factory during the pandemic was honored with a new car

With all the difficult and draining news out in the world right now, we were happy to read this heartwarming story of a teacher who is going above and beyond to help protect frontline workers. Mazda recently honored him with a new car. Via CNN.

When health care workers were running out of personal protective equipment as the coronavirus pandemic spread across the United States, a middle school shop teacher in New Jersey decided he had to help.

Jason Erdreich turned his own home into a factory where he used 3D printers to make thousands of masks for his community during the pandemic.

“I mean I had to,” Erdreich, 26, told CNN. “I had the resources to help, I was able to help, I couldn’t not help others that were doing so much to help us. Front line workers were, and are, doing so much to care for us, someone needs to make sure they are taken care of too. I’m glad I was able to contribute to that.”

Read more.

3MF 3D Printing Format Now a Linux Foundation Open Standards Project

We have always been limited by the lack of standards in 3D printing. In software, especially, not having a clear overall roadmap or plan for the entire software toolchain and ecosystem for 3D printing has retarded our progress. We’ve been locked into antiquated de facto standards as a result of this. The STL file type, for example, is hilariously bad at conveying the shape of things that need to be printed in an efficient manner. Furthermore, with gradient materials, full-color printing and parameterization on the horizon, the STL simply will not suffice. The file type was not designed to be extensible to the extent that it could, in a lightweight way, contain this kind of information. Alongside our manufacturing push as an industry, we should also clean house and out out out with the cobwebs of old. A new digital foundation for digital manufacturing has always been the aim of the 3MF Consortium.

They proposed a 3MF file type that would be able to describe and convey all of the necessary manufacturing info as well as do a better job of describing the geometry and materiality of the objects made with 3D printing. When dealing with manifold and nonmanifold objects, as well as allowing for colors and supports, its genuinely a much better choice. 3MF adoption has, however, been glacial at best. Many were wary of the big company Consortium. Also, “Consortium” sounds like a more organized form of a Cabal that secretly runs an exploitative labor ridden banana republic run by men in Broncos and bad suits, ripe for overthrow by the A-Team aided by welding equipment and a ragtag gaggle of newly emancipated workers. Despite this, software packages and firms are slowly adopting 3MF and, over the last five years, adoption has been growing. This is sure to accelerate now, however, as 3MF has joined the Linux Foundation.

3MF has also announced that former Executive Director, Microsoft’s Adrian Lannin, has been replaced by the newly elected Luis Baldez, of HP. Baldez is the former manager of HP’s 3D printing software and currently is Market Development Manager for HP’s 3D Printing business.

Of the news, Baldez said that,

“The 3MF Consortium has done the important work to create an open standard for 3D printing. The time is now to drive the evolution of 3MF from development to implementation. We would not be where we are today without Adrian Lannin’s leadership and contributions, and we’re looking forward to his insights as our ongoing advisor.”

Autodesk’s 3D Printing leader, Alexander Oster, who heads the 3MF technical working group stated,

“Luis is a longtime champion of open standards and is an expert in the 3D printing space. Luis’ leadership and our collaboration with Linux Foundation will accelerate our work on 3D printing and help us build an even more vibrant network of contributions.”

The Linux Foundation has the financial wherewithal, as well as the clout with developers and with large technology companies to really supercharge 3MF’s efforts. It should make everyone feel more secure about the future of 3MF and its “open-sourceness.”  As an industry, we really deserve better files that—in a more detailed, easier, and capable way—encapsulate all of the things we want to make. I personally still want StuffDNA, but really do like 3MF’s efforts to really make a new 3D printing software scaffolding for a new 3D printing era.

The core goals of 3MF for our file format is to give us a format that is:

  • Complete: Containing all of the necessary model, material and property information in a single archive

  • Human Readable: Using common structures such as OPC, ZIP, and XML to ease development

  • Simple: A short, clear specification, making development easy and validation fast

  • Extensible: Leveraging XML namespaces allow for both public and private extensions while maintaining compatibility

  • Unambiguous: Clear language and conformance tests ensure a file is always consistent from digital to physical

  • Free: Access to and implementation of the 3MF specification is and will always be free of royalties, patents and licensing

This is laudable and by having its development anchored by the Linux Foundation should ensure that given enough eyeballs all things will be shallow. You can find the 3MF files on GitHub file repositories such as YouMagine and use it with Fusion360, PrusaSlicer or SolidWorks.

The post 3MF 3D Printing Format Now a Linux Foundation Open Standards Project appeared first on 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing.

How My Track Technology Uses 3D Printing for Their Remote All-Terrain Vehicle

My Track Technology (MTT) is an eco-friendly, electric remote-controlled track vehicle built to operate in extreme terrains. Its low center of gravity, resistance to the elements and autonomy make it a crucial new tool for a wide range of civilian and military applications including emergency and disaster rescues and agricultural functions.

Partnered with Shapeways, the makers of MTT were able to use 3D printing to cut substantial time and costs in their production process by rapidly prototyping designs and printing strong, end-use ready parts that can resist the elements.

We interviewed Michael Martel from MTT to find out how MTT has utilized Shapeways’ 3D printing technology to ramp up production with speed and efficiency.

What is your name and your role at My Track Technology?

My name is Michael
Martel and I’m in charge of the MTT product development.

How did My Track Technology start?

10 years ago my
father and I were discussing a product that can enhance human power but as
small as possible to be able to go where a person can walk. The main goal was
to be able to get someone that is injured out of deep forest and at the same
time bring reduced mobility
persons to extreme places.

From a sketch in 2010 (left) to a fully functional machine in 2020 (right).

What kinds of customers can MTT benefit?

Our customers are very broad. First, there is the military for rescue and material carrying. Mining for carrying material underground without any fumes and CO2 that has to be ventilated out of the mine. Wildfire suppression help, carrying water pumps and equipment. Also fat bike trails grooming, for agriculture use on wet fields or carrying a freezer in the field for fruits and vegetable harvesting. Replacing a generator on construction sites with MTT-154 onboard 2000W inverter, and much much more. 

My Track Technology rescue and rapid intervention
My Track Technology’s machine used in rescue and rapid intervention.
Photo source: My Track Technology

How did you find Shapeways?

Four years
ago one of my electronic employees bought a cheap FDM printer that he assembled himself. At that time I was very skeptical of 3D printing,
I was thinking it was only for toys and figurines. Nevertheless I let him try
some joystick parts. I was at the time building it with a laser cut aluminum
sheet, bent and welded to make an enclosed case. His part with FDM (PLA) was so successful that we
used it for our vehicle for about a year, very amazing. The problem with this
part was the surface finish, time to print and resistance to wet environments.
I was so impressed by this test that I decided
to learn more on 3D printing methods, suppliers and more. This is when I came
to Shapeways’ website and was very impressed
by the technical information and production
capabilities.

I then decided to
manufacture a couple of parts at Shapeways and I have
never been disappointed since. Shapeways is not the
least expensive but I tested many suppliers over the years and I did a lot of
cold temperature testing. Shapeways always has the strongest and nicer finished parts. 

Unless you have $100,000 or more to invest in an SLS or HP printer you will never have the quality, robustness, precision and surface finish of a Shapeways part.

What are the benefits of using Shapeways over an in-office printer?

When buying a printer you have an amazing amount of choice offered to you. The problem is to have a printer for all of the applications. The size of the parts, the surface finish, the resistance and the productivity of this printer are all to be considered. Unless you have $100,000 or more to invest in an SLS or HP printer you will never have the quality, robustness, precision and surface finish of a Shapeways part. Shapeways is a one-stop shop for 3D printing projects. They have multiple machines to accommodate all the requirements of all special projects. So for us Shapeways has been a great partner to reach all of our goals, present and future.

What are the benefits of 3D printing with Shapeways over other manufacturing methods?

Speed, cost and simplicity. When our 3D drawing is finished we don’t have to produce fabrication drawings. We just upload the 3D file on Shapeways’ website. Very simple. We also do not have to build a mold for 1 up to 50 parts. It’s very great cost saving. Later when the design is perfect we can build a mold and be confident that the mold will meet our requirements. We are also not limited to a particular shape with 3D printing, practically every shape is possible. Finally, the precision, repeatability and tolerances are better than most of the others manufacturing methods.

“The precision, repeatability and tolerances [of 3D printing technology] are better than most of the others manufacturing methods

What aspect of My Track Technology production do you use 3D printing and Shapeways for?

We are right now
moving to production and most of the parts that had previously been tested with
3D printing are now thermo or injection molded. 3D printing saves us an amazing amount of money by testing
different designs quickly. When the design is
confirmed the mold can be built with the peace of mind that this part works perfectly well.

The other 10 parts
that are needed for an
MTT-154 2020 will continue to be built with 3D
printing technologies. Up to about 100 MTT-154 units per year it totally makes
sense to print parts in Nylon. We save the initial cost of the mold and we can design parts
that are impossible to manufacture with a traditional mold.

What materials do you use?

Right now we mostly use SLS, with Nylon PA12 (Versatile Plastic), dyed black. We also use rubber like TPU to create custom grommets.

How does working with Shapeways affect the speed of your manufacturing?

In our MTT machine there are about 20 plastic parts. Last year we were in a very big rush to do a test with the US military and we had no time to build 20 molds for every single part. We saved at least 6 months (concept, drawing for molding, mold building and parts production) by 3D printing with Shapeways.

How about any cost savings?

For 20 plastic parts the average cost of a mold is $3500 * 20 = 70,000 USD. This money would have been a very big gamble knowing that we were unsure if these parts would meet the functionality, design and resistance we needed. $70K is a lot of money for a startup. It’s manageable, but $70K without any guarantee that this mold will be useful in the future is unacceptable.

Video source: My Track Technology

What is the most important aspect of working with Shapeways for you?

First, when we want
a strong part I know that Shapeways will not disappoint us. Also the website is
very easy to use, and I like the freedom to choose the shipping you want
depending on the requirement of a particular project. The quality control is
also excellent because I never return a part. Finally, the service when I need
information is excellent.

Can you share any current or future goals for My Track Technology?

The goal right now
is really to move to production and send machines to the customers that have
reserved these vehicles in the past. The product we sell right now is our
MTT-154 2020, with the possibilities to have only one unit with a trailer/sled
or with the flip of a switch multiple units coupled together for special military and industrial
applications.

Finally, we have orders for some small MTT-like robots. The frame will be built entirely in SLS printing at Shapeways very soon.

The next stage in 2021-2022 will be remote control with satellite or 4G and autonomous capabilities.

Efficient Manufacturing with 3D Printing

My Track Technology’s vast range of potential applications will see it become an essential tool for assisting humans in navigating challenging terrains and environments. Using 3D printing has made MTT’s production process much more efficient and affordable and shows how 3D printing can contribute to smarter manufacturing.

Find out how Shapeways can help with your rapid prototyping and robotics manufacturing needs.

The post How My Track Technology Uses 3D Printing for Their Remote All-Terrain Vehicle appeared first on Shapeways Blog.

Phil Schultz of 3D Systems on 3D Printing Supply Chain Assurance

Phil Schultz is executive vice president of Operations at 3D Systems. As a seasoned 3D printing exec, he leads all on-demand operations there. Before that, he lead Foxconn’s printing business and spent 25 years at HP, ultimately leading their consumer inkjet offering. I interviewed Phil and enjoyed his measured, thoughtful responses, which showed his deep understanding of the possible and impossible of additive. 

The current crisis has exposed the brittleness of our just-in-time manufacturing world. Small ripples in the system can propagate, reinforce themselves, and cause waves that, in turn, build up to a storm, collapsing the system. A factory in Thailand closing or a freighter being diverted can wreak havoc on the intricate supply chains that connect our globalized society. A system that is so massive and world-spanning as global commerce and transport turned out to shatter easily in a difficult situation. Many global organizations are now discovering that they need to do more to audit and update their supply chains. Supply chain resilience once meant that you had more than one supplier for critical components. But now we all know that we need to look further to assure supply. What role can 3D printing play in this? 

Phil differentiates between “short-term and long-term supply chain interruptions.” “Especially in an emergency…3D printing can help” and do so much faster than other technologies can. If “additive is a contingency or it is used in bridge manufacturing,” it is often an excellent choice. We “don’t need any tooling…and we’re not bound to a geography” with 3D printing “through a distributed manufacturing model…or one order being delivered globally” we can respond in a crisis, and we’re “lightning fast.” Especially for “small parts in runs of a 100, 1,000 or 10,000…additive has the advantage.” 

The “downside with 3D printing is the materials…that your parts are different than injection molded parts,” and “part properties and strength may not be the same.” “Your parts could be good enough for the application,” but he cautions customers against entering into production “without qualification…because then you’re carrying a lot of risk.” There will also be “cost differences…and often increased costs mean that without mass customization additive may not always make sense.” 

He likes to take customers through “a simple calculation…that often shows that pricing represents “multiples of an injection-molded part—not 20% or 30% higher—multiples” and, in that case, if “you’re going to do a replacement of a conventional part,” the business case falters. In that case, “you’d only do it because you have no choice.”

However, if you “learn to design for the technology…and use it to combine parts…lose weight…bring value,” it changes the equation. “Why would you want this is part to be 3D printed…and what does that mean for your business?” He maintains that “3D printing is…not a replacement for CNC or injection molding…it is just another tool” and “you must use it wisely.” 3D printing can help you “guard against the future…and find your future more quickly,” but it is no panacea. 

A 3D Systems On Demand site in Lawrenceburg, TN.

A 3D Systems On Demand site in Lawrenceburg, TN.

There are often overlooked alternatives, made possible by 3D printing, that allow for more scale and lower costs. This includes “3D printing positive investment casting print patterns,” “using Real Wax for lost wax casting,” or “directly 3D printing low-pressure injection molds.”

“By casting urethane..or through thermoforming inserts” relatively low-cost parts can be made in the millions, as Invisalign already does with the latter technology. In “thermoforming, some customers are making over 400,000 parts a day,” through the use of 3D printing as an intermediate. Yes, in an emergency, he understands that people are printing face shields. But, if we step back, then we can consider making the headband through thermoforming or urethane casting and using an acetate screen to sterilize the parts more easily. Phil continually seeks to use additive for the right applications, the right parts. “We are geometry agnostic, require no tooling, and we are fast to the first part, but must be aware of the tradeoffs in materials and more expense.” 

3D Systems MJP Wax

He’s excited “by making spare parts out of polyamide…through sintering…especially of filled materials” and, also, “new possibilities in TPU.” Higher temperature resins for SLA are also pushing the envelope of what is possible there. Now, “we are getting resins with good flexural strength, elongation…that make parts that can bend well while being less brittle.” 

When he does introduce 3D printing for manufacturing at a firm, he likes to “start with the applications people..and walk the (production) lines…to see how we can help… We can evaluate our services…your parts…and see what sense it makes to outsource or do in-house.” Ideally, he’d like to “get into the design phase…and help companies with qualification..or share with them how to qualify products for additive.” Surprisingly, one of the sectors that he is most excited about is EMS and contract manufacturing firms.

“They have tonnes of injection molded parts…many indirect parts…and can often use additive in the short term…but have not considered it for more.” With these businesses, “almost every fixture and tool can be improved, adjusted or is now more quickly consumed,” making it more suitable for additive. “An iPhone production line may have 600 people on it and as many steps. Imagine a five percent improvement.”

He likes asking manufacturing firms, “what do you need?” and then “having complex conversations about matching material properties to needs…avoiding tooling…and the level of proof required for them to proceed.”  He’s now increasingly seeing “ducts, knobs, connections, functional parts in gear trains…and on the whole, things that are more functional in assemblies” being made with additive. A few years ago, he only used to “talk to R&D, and now we talk with [operations]…about things that I care about, such as cycle time.”

3D printing “is emerging as a backup plan….but you have to design for it… 3D printing services could, through their hundreds of machines…solve customer problems,” but firms could also have 3D print capacity in-house for the most relevant materials to them. Either way, qualified parts can be manufactured at scale, but not all parts can be made cost-effectively through 3D printing.

It is clear from Phil’s recent experience that additive is maturing and new applications are being discovered all the time. New realism is unlocking actual manufacturing and, in due time, we could provide true supply chain reassurance through 3D printing. Ultimately, “I want to go in front of every industrial engineer in the world and show them how their creativity can be unleashed with 3D printing.” 

The post Phil Schultz of 3D Systems on 3D Printing Supply Chain Assurance appeared first on 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing.

Best of Made in NYC Featuring a #RadioBonnet Tester #Adafruit @Adafruit

This is a Best of Made in NYC post, today’s post goes back to:
Made in NYC 1/16/2019 Featuring a #RadioBonnet Tester #Adafruit @Adafruit

Radio Bonnet tester (0:03)

Afternoon glow inside the PnP (0:37)

Beginnings of a Grand Central controlled robotic xylophone (0:46)

Grand Central boards in selective solder machine (0:55)

3D printing timelapse (1:05)

3D printed lamp using Bluefruit M0 Feather (1:21)

Andy’s desk of electronics (1:31)

DIY cellphone using FONA (1:37)

Stills of a solder paste tub being opened (1:51)

Winter sunset (2:04)

See more

Best of Made in NYC Featuring #Adafruit Auto-Baggers in Action! @Adafruit

This is a Best of Made in NYC post, today’s post goes back to:

Made in NYC 5/15/2019 Featuring #Adafruit Auto-Baggers in Action! @Adafruit

Board loader loading a board (0:05)

Board loader time lapse (0:13)

Cleaning solder nozzle with flux (0:23)

Auto-baggers in action, prepping products (0:30)

TV-B-Gone chip getting programmed (1:00)

3d printing a large block (1:14)

Sunset 05-07-19 (1:37)

See more Made in NYC!

Adafruit Weekly Editorial Round-Up: ADABOX-mas The Musical, Circuit Playground TFT Gizmo Snow Globe, Not Shipping Orders on Thanksgiving, & more!

INewImage 21 1 1


ADAFRUIT WEEKLY EDITORIAL ROUND-UP


We’ve got so much happening here at Adafruit that it’s not always easy to keep up! Don’t fret, we’ve got you covered. Each week we’ll be posting a handy round-up of what we’ve been up to, ranging from learn guides to blog articles, videos, and more.


BLOG

It’s beginning to look a lot like ADABOX-mas – THE MUSICAL!

More BLOG:


LEARN

Musical Walking Stick with CircuitPlayground: Turn your cane into a custom musical contraption

More LEARN

Browse all that’s new in the Adafruit Learning System here!

Michael Gorski of Filament Innovations On FDM for Manufacturing

I kept hearing from people about Michael Gorski and Filament Innovations. I was repeatably told that in Pennsylvania a small firm was making open FDM systems made for manufacturing. I’ve predicted for a number of years now that the small scale open desktop FDM systems, first not suitable for much of anything, would morph into the manufacturing systems of the future over time. I really think that for large objects such as car bumpers or dashboards medium format FDM will be the technology of choice while for many smaller parts clusters of FDM printers will be the norm. Open FDM just gives you tough, dimensionally accurate parts at low cost without a lock in with a materials vendor or an OEM. For many industries at volume I think that open FDM is the manufacturing solution of the future. For that to happen we need intelligent clusters of machines (which Ultimaker and Prusa seem to be working on) and much more reliable medium format machines with high throughput, yield, and repeatability. The latter challenge is what Filament Innovations is taking on.

 

What is Filament Innovations? 

Filament Innovations is a family-owned FDM 3D Printer manufacturer located near Allentown, Pennsylvania. We focus on selling FDM printers to businesses across America. We specialize in advanced 3D Printers that are both robust and affordable for all size businesses. We really pride ourselves on the level of quality and craftsmanship that goes into each 3D Printer we build. We often tell our customers that we are the “hot rod shop” of 3D Printers as we can custom build a printer to suit a customer’s needs.

When and why did you start it? 

The company was started in October 2015; when we launched we were not building printers, but selling our own private line of filament. As FDM 3D Printing grew, we saw the hardware market get split into two segments – the “race to the bottom” imported printer and the expensive larger format printers, costing over $50,000. Many business owners who wanted to adopt FDM 3D Printing were scared of the lack of after-sales support and reliability from the imported machines, or did not have $50,000 on hand for a capital investment to buy a more well-known machine. With that in mind, we quickly saw market opportunity for a large scale, American built, and high quality FDM unit in the $15,000 – $20,000 range. 

Tell us about your Icarus printer? 

Our BFP-ICARUS 3D Printer is the backbone of the company. Our business model is simple, make the best printer we can with no cheap add-ons and sell it for one flat, shipped price with as many USA components as possible. At $15,000 shipped via LTL Freight, our BFP-ICARUS is a leader in the FDM market in terms of quality and craftsmanship. Our linear motion system is a full ballscrew design with HiWin linear rails and TBI ballscrews, running on custom made NEMA 23 motors. Our extrusion system is produced by Dyze Designs, with their PRO series hotend and extruder combination, which comes equipped with a PT100 sensor and Tungsten Carbide nozzle. Every printer is factory equipped with a Gecko print plate, allowing customers to print common filaments and have them release easily with the removable print plate. The entire frame of the printer is wrapped in quarter inch Optix USA Made acrylic which stiffens the entire body of the unit so you don’t have to worry about any frame slag or shaking. The build area satisfies customers’ needs at 470x381x915 (mm).

What kind of customers buy it?

We love selling printers to industries that put them to work and use them on a daily basis. The majority of our customers are in the Prosthetics and Orthotics industry where they print customized below the knee check sockets for patients. Since every prosthetic socket is unique, this is a great application for our BFP-ICARUS units. Beyond the O&P market, we also work with the US Army Research lab and the Navy, specifically NAWC (Naval Air Warfare Center). We are continuing to grow our relationship with other defense departments and are in the planning phase of putting more BFP-ICARUS units into defense work soon. 

What makes it different?

What makes the BFP-ICARUS different in terms of being an FDM Printer, and Filament Innovations different in terms of being a FDM manufacturer, is how we do business in the industry. At Filament Innovations we are not selling you a product and then moving on to the next customer, we are creating a partnership to bring FDM 3D Printing into their company. Businesses can be hesitant to buy an FDM 3D Printer because they do not know what they need it for, how to run it, or how to service it. We get to know each customer and their business individually and help them understand how FDM 3D Printing can help their business. For example, when you buy a BFP-ICARUS unit, we schedule a two to three hour video chat with you on the day you receive it (Skype, FaceTime, etc). On that chat, we walk around the printer with you and go over its basic operations and how to maintain it. We really go the extra mile in terms of customer service and that is why our customer’s come back to use for future printers. Plus, as a fun “wow” moment for the customer, we laser etch their logo right next to ours on every machine that goes out the door. This gives our customer’s a personal touch that provides them confidence in their decision of partnering with Filament Innovations.

 How capable is it? 

The unit is extremely capable in terms of what it can do as the unit is enclosed, the Dyze PRO series hotend can go to 450C with ease, and the unit comes with all the bells and whistles you would want (auto bed leveling, independent Z motor bed leveling, WiFi, etc). The one unique selling points that really impresses our customers is its upgradability for the extrusion systems. Filament Innovations may have one of the best relationships in the history of FDM with Dyze Designs. We have made every BFP-ICARUS unit upgradable to accommodate Dyze’s 2.85mm high flow Typhoon system and the Pulsar pellet extrusion system. This means customers can buy one 3D Printer, and upgrade that one unit to a high-flow filament or pellet extrusion system once these systems come to market. For example, in the prosthetics industry, a below the knee socket is a large, relatively basic, but unique shape that needs to be printed quickly. Customers who choose to buy their BFP-ICARUS now can get their feet wet with 3D Printing and then buy the upgrade kits to retro-fit their 3D Printer as Dyze Designs releases these new systems. We designed our BFP-ICARUS platform with ballscrews for a reason, it can handle the additional weight of these extrusion systems out of the gate, which means customers do not need to buy an additional printer. This is just another example of how we are putting the customer’s needs first and not forcing them to buy an entirely new printer.   

The post Michael Gorski of Filament Innovations On FDM for Manufacturing appeared first on 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing.

How 3D Printing Jigs and Fixtures Transforms Manufacturing Part II – All About Fixtures

Fixtures are essential for custom manufacturers. Fixtures hold the workpiece in place so it does not move during a step in manufacturing. Some shapes are easy to hold such as a rectangular block. For example, the part can be simply held in a vice. For shapes with various curves and angles, it can be difficult to hold them sturdy using standard tools. Fixtures solve this problem by clamping onto parts while matching the part’s geometry like a glove.

Jig or Fixture?

Fixtures may sometimes be called jigs, but they are not the same thing. Jigs guide the motion of tools and they are usually used in manual operations such as drilling holes. Fixtures are very sturdy and will accurately hold the workpiece at the correct angle, but fixtures do not guide tools. Fixtures are more often used with automated manufacturing methods. For more information on Jigs, check out our article about jigs.

All about Fixtures

Fixtures make inserting and removing parts much easier. They are typically designed in an intuitive way that reduces the risk of human error. Fixtures can be re-used for large production runs, or created specifically for a small number of custom parts.

Fixtures must be mounted to a sturdy surface before they can be used effectively. Some fixtures are designed to fit onto a standard bench vice, others attach to standard mounting boards like  T-slot tables or hole grids. Fixtures are rigidly bolted or mounted onto shop equipment.

Traditionally, custom fixtures are made manually. The design is planned out, then work material is cut, milled, and drilled into shape. This process requires costly materials, expensive equipment, skilled machinists, and a considerable amount of labor. It may also require purchasing new tooling for unique shapes.

Benefits of 3D Printed Fixtures

3D printing is a viable alternative when it comes to creating custom fixtures. It is more cost-effective to 3D print a custom fixture than it is to machine one in-house. With 3D printing, a fixture only needs to be designed using CAD software and sent out to a 3D printing service such as www.shapeways.com After a few days, it’ll get printed, shipped and delivered, ready to use.

3D printed fixtures are made from strong and lightweight plastics such as nylon. Nylon is tough and durable. Fixtures made from nylon will last for many production cycles. As a plastic, it is not as dense as metal, so large fixtures will be lightweight in comparison. Nylon is softer than most rigid materials, and this is good because the fixture will not scratch or damage the part’s surface. The softer material aids in providing a more uniform clamping pressure. Under high clamping loads, the nylon can deform to the shape of the part, saving both from being damaged.

Here are a few examples of innovative fixtures that have been designed specifically for 3D printing.

1”x1” Board Fixture

This fixture is mounted onto a 1”x1” mounting grid board or mounting table. It can be used to hold your working piece in place to either be cut, drilled or assembled. The working piece is clamped by the fixture as screws are tightened, holding it securely. This fixture can also be used as a cylinder holder for cutting pipes and tubes.

Material: Multi Jet Fusion Plastic – Gray PA12 (nylon 12)

Bench Vice Jaw Adapter Fixture

This fixture is an accessory for a bench vice that when attached, can hold a wide arrangement of objects. This is done by inserting magnets (not included) into the provided spots on the back of the fixture and then placing the fixture onto the jaws of a bench vice.

Material: SLS – PA11 (nylon 11)

Door Lock Installation Fixture

This is a fixture used to assist in the installation of a doorknob or lever. It provides accurate alignment between the working parts of a doorknob or lever. This is done by finding the centerline of your door edge, aligning the two smaller holes with the centerline and securing the fixture to the door with screws temporarily at those points. Once that is done, you can now use the recommended hole saw and the fixture as a guide to drill the remaining holes out where you would be left with perfectly aligned holes to install a doorknob or lever.

Material: Versatile Plastic – White Processed

Cut Down Your Production Costs

If you would like to learn more about how 3D printing can help your business save money and reduce manufacturing costs, get in contact with Shapeways using our Sign up form.

The post How 3D Printing Jigs and Fixtures Transforms Manufacturing Part II – All About Fixtures appeared first on 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing.