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Nylon 12CF Endures Thule Test Centre's Ultimate Test of Strength 


aaron pearson

Aaron Pearson

Vice President of Public Relations

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How do you go about incubating products for your brand that help your customers realise and experience their passion for life?  That's the question that Rob Humphries, a prototype engineer at Thule, a company that makes accessories for travel - things like bike racks, jogging strollers and luggage - and his product teams have answered in the creation the Thule Test Centre, a space specifically designed for functional testing and validation of Thule's products.

"Our Testing is Brutal" - Rob Humphries

The Thule test methodology is one where rigor and stamina rule.  Prototypes are tested in the real world, and Thule engineers and technicians try out the functions that will make the equipment safer, easier and more fun to use. Such a tenacious process needs an equally tenacious material, and Rob and his team leaned on Stratasys for an introduction to Nylon 12CF. While other materials fell short of the boundaries the Thule team set forth to push, Nylon 12CF stood strong, out performing in a variety of ways.  Other materials tested would break or bend, causing the engineers to head back to the drawing board. “Nylon 12CF has been game-changing for us,” said Humphries. “Nothing that we could get affordably or quickly has the properties that Nylon 12CF does. It lets us more accurately model our production parts, test faster, and get to market faster.”

https://youtu.be/JVaTv0T-rFU

Click here to learn more about FDM Nylon 12CF material.

Learn more about Thule's 3D printing experience to produce consumer goods here. 

Learn how Thule Encourages Beyond-The-Textbook Skills For Design Engineers.

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Get your questions about FDM Nylon12 Carbon Fibre answered with Sam Green and Zehavit Reisin, VP, Head of Rapid Prototyping at Stratasys.

English voiceover, no subtitles. Functional prototypes with Nylon 12 Carbon Fibre. Thule uses a carbon-filled nylon FDM material to build test prototypes strong enough to simulate the finished parts, made out of injection moulded glass-filled materials. Thule’s in-house prototypes using this nylon material have saved it enough time and money to almost achieve ROI on two 3D printers within two years of purchase. Learn more: https://www.stratasys.com/materials/search/fdm-nylon-12cf

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