I can't see how that 'wrench' came out as two, functioning interacting parts and not one complex moulding as the scanner can't read what is happening within a shrouded internal thread.
did they say that one was scanned?
99% of the parts made on rapid proto machines are from 3D models made by CAD packages.
The plastic wrench and the plastic D valve are of course no use for anything apart from looking at.
Once upon a time, I had some prototype plastic covers made by rapid prototyping. They even managed to include the customer logo in the part. We sprayed one black and it looked like a 'real' part from injection moulding.
They were made for an assembly process trial to make sure it could be fitted easily by an operator in a few seconds of line time.
However, assembled to the gearbox, we had the rapid proto put on vibration test (people whinged about that being a waste of time, but the parts were available and the gearbox test was being done anyway, so we figured there was nothing to loose). The rapid proto part passed the vinration testing, so had a lot less to worry about when the tooling was laid down.
We'd looked at vibration modes in FEA, but nothing beats a real test for letting you know things are ok.
Ray. MMOC#47368. Forum moderator.
Jan 06: The Minor SII Africa adventure:
http://www.minor-detour.com
Oct 06: back from Dresden with my Trabant 601 Kombi
Jan 07: back from a month thru North Africa (via Timbuktu) in a S3 Landy
June 07 - back from Zwickau Trabi Treffen
Aug 07 & Aug 08 - back from the Lands End to Orkney in 71 pickup
Sept 2010 - finally gave up breaking down in a SII Landy...
where to break down next?
2013... managed to seize my 1275 just by driving it round the block
