SolidCAM Additive - Upgrade Your Manufacturing
Published

Video: AM for Product Development at Pella Corporation

Speed to market is a critical advantage 3D printing can enable. For its new product innovations, Pella iterates quickly using prototypes and tooling produced via AM.

Share

Windows and doors are a competitive business — a new innovation or style improvement can be a commercial win only if the manufacturer can bring it to market faster than a competitor can develop something similar. Window and door maker Pella Corporation experienced this recently with its Steady Set system for simplified window installation, as well as its Hidden Screen system for separating the screen and window glass. In both cases, additive manufacturing was a vital tool for rapid product development. 3D printing made prototype parts, then the initial tooling for short-run production. I learned about the role of AM for product development during a recent visit to the company’s headquarters facility in Pella, Iowa.

Related

Transcipt

I'm at the Pella Corporation in Pella, Iowa. Maker of windows and doors. Pella extensively uses 3D printing for product development to, among other things, develop new ideas in windows.

Here is an example: the Steady Set System. Very different idea for installing windows — install them from the inside rather than the outside, for speed, for safety. The system relies on these special clips that slide right into place to secure the window from the inside. Developing these clips took a lot of engineering iteration, and that was done through 3D printing.

The product development resources here include selective laser sintering and various fused filament fabrication machines. The steady set brackets were developed initially through selective laser sintering. Get the design just right. These components aren't functional, but when the design was there or almost there, it was time to go to the steel version. And initial tooling for bending this steel was also made through 3D printing, fused filament fabrication.

We don't have that die here. But here's another example of product development using a 3D printed tool. This strangely shaped clip is vital for Pella’s Hidden Screen system. The screen disappears into the window frame as the window is raised and lowered. This clip is a molded part. It was initially 3D printed to develop the idea and then again when the idea was close, the mold tooling initially was made through 3D printing. Not a tool that is sufficiently long lasting for full production, but capable of many, many shots while the part is still in development.

Why is product development through 3D printing so important for Pella? A couple of reasons. One, it allows for rapid iteration and lots of iterations. Get the design just right so that a bracket like this works exactly as it should functionally, and in terms of the feel in field operation, but also product development is risky. It's very important to get the product to market before another company can introduce a similar idea. The speed of product development relying on 3D printing helps to mitigate that risk.

World According To
Acquire
Airtech
SolidCAM Additive - Upgrade Your Manufacturing
The Cool Parts Show
North America’s Premier Molding and Moldmaking Event
AM Radio

Related Content

Sustainability

Concept Sneaker Boasts One-Piece 3D Printed TPU Construction

The Reebok x Botter Concept Sneaker Engineered by HP premiered at Paris Fashion Week, hinting at manufacturing possibilities for the future of footwear.

Read More
Production

ActivArmor Casts and Splints Are Shifting to Point-of-Care 3D Printing

ActivArmor offers individualized, 3D printed casts and splints for various diagnoses. The company is in the process of shifting to point-of-care printing and aims to promote positive healing outcomes and improved hygienics with customized support devices.

Read More
Polymer

3D Printed Spine Implants Made From PEEK Now in Production

Medical device manufacturer Curiteva is producing two families of spinal implants using a proprietary process for 3D printing porous polyether ether ketone (PEEK).

Read More
Production

Copper, New Metal Printing Processes, Upgrades Based on Software and More from Formnext 2023: AM Radio #46

Formnext 2023 showed that additive manufacturing may be maturing, but it is certainly not stagnant. In this episode, we dive into observations around technology enhancements, new processes and materials, robots, sustainability and more trends from the show. 

Read More

Read Next

FFF

When Advocacy Leads to Adoption: How Pella Applies (and Manages) AM Capacity

The window and door maker offers a picture of successful, widespread 3D printing adoption across the different needs of a manufacturing organization. The outreach and education effort worked. Now, here is the next phase.

Read More
Tooling

Video: 3D Printed Hand Tools in Action on Pella Corporation Factory Tour

Examples include an invention for quickly installing window and door weather stripping, a fitting for giving the proper angle to a nail gun, and a clip for which the color is an important feature.

Read More
LFAM

Alquist 3D Looks Toward a Carbon-Sequestering Future with 3D Printed Infrastructure

The Colorado startup aims to reduce the carbon footprint of new buildings, homes and city infrastructure with robotic 3D printing and a specialized geopolymer material.

Read More
SolidCAM Additive - Upgrade Your Manufacturing