Designing for 3D Printing

The turning gears on this object were printed rather than assembled. Courtesy of Zcorp.


If you’ve ever seen Fiddler on the Roof you might be familiar with a song called “Tradition.” The song describes how the inhabitants of a village go about their daily lives, all based on how the people before them did things. This kind of thinking holds true for design choices. People who are used to creating designs that use traditional methods of manufacturing don’t always consider how the process can change to reflect the use of additive manufacturing (AM).

A white paper by Jim Comb, a systems engineer with Stratasys, Inc., titled “How to Design Your Part for Direct Digital Manufacturing,” makes some good points about the AM mindset needed by design engineers. Below are my takes on it.

Most 3D printing processes allow for sturdy objects to be built with fewer concessions made to the actual method of manufacturing. Instead of worrying if a design will require new tools (that increase cost) to be created or taking into account things like proper draft angles to ensure a part will eject from a machine, 3D printing encourages innovation over methodology.

ZCorp Gears

Even if an object doesn’t perform exactly as expected the first time, making changes and building a new part is much faster when you can print it out in hours, instead of wasting days reworking specialized parts or machining new tools for the job.

Designing for AM allows people to concentrate on functionality. 3D printing can create incredibly complex objects with internal geometries that would be time consuming to reproduce through traditional manufacturing. The first pass of a design can be drawn up without concern for how feasible it will be to build the object in question. Form follows functionality, instead of the reverse.

Thinking about how the materials used to create a part or object also changes when using AM. Using traditional methods, once a set of tools are created to manufacture something, the materials involved often can’t be changed without extensive refitting. 3D printing allows you to change the materials used after each print run. This can be useful for prototyping as well as end use products.

Wall thickness is another area that changes with AM. In place of the 0.04 to 0.08 in. minimum thickness required to avoid warping and sink marks that occur as part of the manufacturing process, the only concern need be if the wall is thick enough for the object to perform as intended. Variable-density printing can also create walls with a lattice structure that can reduce overall weight of a part.

Finally, 3D printing allows for a quick flow of design and redesign, all the way up to the launch of the product or part. Feedback can be quickly implemented and even a complete redesign is possible without a massive loss of time or money. If a breakthrough is made in the twilight hours of a deadline, AM allows for that breakthrough to go into immediate production.

Below you’ll find a short video that features complex designs created with 3D printing.


Source: Stratasys

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About the Author

John Newman

John Newman is a Digital Engineering contributor who focuses on 3D printing. Contact him via [email protected] and read his posts on Rapid Ready Technology.

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