3D printing for when you have no time

Management and customers always want you to develop products faster. The automotive industry, for example, continues to tighten product development timelines and compress design time in the supplier network. One technology that helps you deal with shorter design and production time is 3D printing/additive manufacturing.

At Delphi, Jerry Rhinehart, manager of additive manufacturing development, has been working with additive manufacturing technologies for more than 20 years. His team’s day-to-day operations focus on prototyping a range of parts including electrical connectors, grommets and housings.

284a9c_multiple_parts_v3

Rhinehart was first introduced to Carbon, the developer of the unique CLIP 3D printing process, in April, 2015. He and his team have been working with the M1 printer to develop functional prototypes, run true part validation testing and explore new opportunities for the production of final, end-use parts.

Rhinehart and his team have realized the potential impact of the CLIP technology and Carbon’s ground-breaking materials. ”We’re excited to expand our work with the M1 to functional prototyping, something we haven’t been able to do until now, and to explore new manufacturing opportunities as a whole,” said Rhinehart. “It’s all about the materials and mechanical properties that we can achieve with Carbon’s technology. Traditional materials only provided about 50% of the mechanical properties we need to produce functional and final parts. We’re currently using the M1 on a project to install a batch of connectors and other electrical components into a 25-car fleet this June for road and validation tests.”

Traditionally, to address the economics of part production, Delphi used technologies like injection molding to deliver parts at scale. But the cost and time of tooling development has limited part production to mass-production only. Rhinehart believes that Carbon’s 3d printer will allow Delphi to access new markets for low and medium volume manufacturing runs.

Rhinehart’s team can leverage CLIP to produce end-use parts, which gives product designers and engineers opportunities to explore the products they develop. “Engineers can start to re-design parts from the ground up without being constrained by the design rules associated with traditional manufacturing technologies. They can consider lighter weight parts using internal mesh structures, single assembly parts that will better address sealing needs and reduce overall complexity of product assembly, and ultimately decrease part and product failure modes because of this new design freedom,” explained Rhinehart.

9715f3_jerry_computer.V2

Since receiving the M1 machine in the Fall of 2015, Delphi has worked to produce and validate a number of parts using an array of Carbon engineering materials including EPU for grommets to protect wiring, FPU to shield parts during product assembly and RPU for an array of electrical connectors.

Electrical connectors are particularly interesting because they are complex, intricate parts that require product design details to account for primary and secondary locking mechanisms and specific engagement and disengagement retention forces. Part accuracy to account for these details has not been possible with conventional 3D printing technologies due to the harsh, layered nature of the processes, which result in jagged edges on the part and inconsistent performance.

The resolution and gentleness of Carbon’s CLIP process makes it possible to develop isotropic parts with smooth surface finishes, allowing product designers to address the necessary retention forces and engagement mechanism for these parts. Traditional manufacturing technologies for such parts have been a time intensive process. Traditionally fabricated electrical connectors require a wait time of 6-12 weeks for a prototype injection-molding tool to be created. If the resulting parts produced then need to be redesigned or changed, the team would need to wait an additional four weeks for tooling revisions.

The flexibility to quickly produce functional parts using the M1 has enabled Delphi to address their customers’ tight product development timelines and more successfully address material needs through functional testing and material validation.

Delphi Champion Technical Center

Carbon is thrilled to be working with Jerry and the team at Delphi to further uncover new manufacturing opportunities across the automotive industry.