Until recently, nylon could not be easily 3D printed in-house. So RedDOT machined metal prototypes for these parts. They worked well for concept modeling but did not represent the physical properties of the nylon part for functional testing. In particular, engineers couldn’t validate the snap-fit or shock resistance of nylon components until committing to tooling and molding prototypes. As a result, in many cases the first molded parts did not meet specifications and the company had to create another iteration, delaying product introduction by up to six weeks and usually requiring expensive modifications to the mold. In a few cases, the modifications were so great that a new mold had to be ordered, costing several months and six-figure retooling charges.
That all changed when the Fortus gained the capability to 3D print in FDM Nylon 12. “When we heard that Stratasys was adding nylon as an FDM material, we said we wanted to try it and they added us to the beta test program,” said Gary Hansen, vice president and chief technology officer of RedDOT. “The new Nylon 12 material does exactly what Stratasys said it would do. We can now make nylon prototypes with nearly the exact same properties as production parts. We have also added the capability to make jigs and fixtures with a snap-fit. For example, we have made a fixture that uses a snap-fit to process hundreds of printed circuit boards every day.” “Producing rapid prototypes with Nylon 12 on our FDM system has made it possible to build functional prototypes of nylon parts that enable us to get the design right the first time,” Hansen concluded. “We have eliminated delays in getting products to market and the cost of tooling modifications and new tooling involving nylon parts.”