CATIA on steroids
Published: 29/11/2008 | Process type: Design
A secret technology could revolutionise the way users work with large assemblies in 3D
Are you sitting comfortably?
Published: 29/11/2008 | Process type: Design
A natural antidote to bland office furniture
Gems of design
Published: 28/11/2008 | Process types: Design and Prototype
The old artisan world of jewelley design gets technical with 3D design
Objet Alaris30
Published: 28/11/2008 | Process type: Prototype
The entry-level RP market gets a boost with Objet’s desktop bound printer
SolidWorks Simulation
Published: 28/11/2008 | Process types: Design and Simulate
Simulation is increasingly becoming a major factor in each SolidWorks release cycle
Communicating via 3D
Published: 28/11/2008 | Process types: Collaborate and Design
Dassault Systèmes CEO Bernard Charles gives an exclusive interview
Green Noise vs Signal
Published: 28/11/2008 | Process type: Design
Al Dean looks at how green issues link to software use
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The latest from the DEVELOP3D Blog:
Chair made from WEEE
Published 05 November 2008
Posted by Stephen Holmes
A chair made the recycled plastics of redundant video game consoles is helping reduce the amount of Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) from our nations gaming habit heading to landfills.
The design of Sprout Design, the REEE chair incorporates the plastic from 9 Playstation2 consoles, each chair preventing 2.4Kg of plastic entering our already crammed landfill sites. Using Solidworks to tweak individual components and construct the final design, the team at Sprout expect to ship 3,000 chairs (equivalent to 7.5 tonnes of recycled plastic) in the next year.
Engineer Guy Robinson, said “The final design is quite complex, though each component by itself is fairly simple. There were a lot of details to get the geometry and ergonomics right, such as how the stiffness and flex of the ribs responded to the body, and how to make the clips tamperproof yet easy to disassemble, etc. Solidworks allowed us to tweak the design of the individual components while showing how this affected the whole product to get it right. We would have abandoned this concept early on if we didn’t have that flexibility.”
The chair is the brainchild of Christopher Pett, founder of sustainable product development company Pli Design Ltd. Sprout used SolidWorks SimulationXpress to ensure the chair would be strong enough to support sitters without over-engineering the amount of plastic in the seat’s ribs, reinforcing the sustainable design theme. Both Pett and Robinson hope the Reee Chair sets a precedent for electronics manufacturers around the world.
Wicked article on EOS DMLS
Published 04 November 2008
Posted by Al Dean
I’m trying to work out how much designers and engineers are aware of rapid prototyping and direct manufacturing processes and stumbled across this article by the team at MindTribe’s blog. Check it.
What I’m pondering is whether users are aware of the new techniques, new processes, new materials and such that are rapidly coming out, advancing and developing and how they can both be used as part of existing design processes or used to create something new, something exciting? Leave a comment and let me know what YOU want to know, how and what.
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