Articles
Pressure
Forming With Style
HP Forges Bold New Look With Thermoforming
- Spring 1999
With so many new CAD-CAM tools coming on the market today it
seemsdesigners have been given tremendous freedom to create
products with ever more style and complexity. These designs are
usually only produced in very high volume to defray the expense
that a complex configuration brings with it. What happens when
the market demands that high-end designer look but the over all
quantity of the product can't justify the tooling expense high
volume processes require? The answer for many has been a Thermoforming
process known as Pressure Forming.
This process has allowed many to produce World-Class award winning
products, while keeping tooling and startup costs within reason.
Thermoforming often goes unnoticed as an industry, yet you probably
come in contact with products made by this process every day. These
range from the package that holds the sauce for your chicken McNuggets
to enclosures for Medical, Scientific, and Telecommunications equipment.
Thermoformed parts are also used widely in the automotive industry
for interior trim, pick-up bed liners, camper shells, as well as
truck, tractor and R-V interiors. The US Postal Service now ships
a large -portion of your mail on Twin Sheet Thermoformed pallets.
It's a multi-million dollar industry with just a few big players,
with the balance made up mostly of smaller companies doing between
1-10 million dollars per year in sales.
Additionally, because of the structural integrity of properly formed
and fabricated Pressure Formed parts they can perform many mechanical
roles. These include supporting operator interfaces, holding circuit
boards, keyboards, LCD Displays and other components. This is allowing
designers to use Pressure Formed parts in more structural applications
than ever before. Using these parts in structural applications
saves both the cost and weight of metal substructures further adding
to Pressure Forming's appeal. This can make Pressure Formed Parts
even more cost effective, as they become an integral part of the
product t, not just it's face to the world.
For
example the HP Media Streamer for Interactive TV can send up to
10,000 concurrent video streams over phone lines. It is an
extremely high tech, state-of-the-art product using all new technology.
Hewlett-Packard Video Communications division's Senior Industrial
Designer Richard Nyquist stated "The design challenge was
to give HP a memorable and exciting look which was critical in
this new market they were entering. The low volume and large part
size 67" x 22" as well as its complexity make Injection
Molding or Structural Foam out of the question as tooling would
have been well over one hundred thousand dollars. So Pressure Forming
was chosen instead. The tooling for Pressure Forming came in at
just under twelve thousand dollars, which was quite a saving. The
Striking and difficult to execute design ended up costing around
$625.00 per unit due to low volume and extensive secondary operations.
However it was strong enough structurally to replace a $500.00
weldment so in real terms it only cost HP $125.00 per door. The
result was a strikingly handsome product for the entertainment
market where appearance is crucial at an exceptional price to value
ratio."
A similar challange had to be met for the new HP Broadcast Video
Server. It's designed for real time insertions of video spots into
live programming such as newscasts. The combination of narrow ribs
blending into a constantly changing spline required some tricky
3D programming to make the tool. The door's complexity also presented
both forming and fabrication challenges. However the final result
was will worth the effort providing a dramatic product design that
looks as high performance as it is.
Richard Nyquist, Senior Industrial Designer for HP observed "Pressure
Forming is allowing me to get a look and feel for these products
that would be out of the question for any other process because
of the volume constraints in the broadcasting equipment business.
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But since these are expensive state-of-the-art products they really
need to stand out from a design standpoint. Using Pressure Forming
we've been able to achieve that. It's really allowing HP to get
a look that it hasn't had in the past."
Albert
Kovalick, Head Scientist for HP's Video Division, said "I
have to explain this technology to our customers and it's filled
very state-of-the-art equipment. So after spending about a half
hour with a VP at Nynex (the New York Phone company) telling him
about all this high tech gear he says "Nice door Al. It was
good to find out that the same kind of engineering effort went
into that door as what's inside."
In order to produce these complex designs, Freetech uses a combination
of state-of-the-art 3-D CAD-CAM and CNC machining to develop the
precision tooling needed to make these high tech products. Additionally
their 30+ plus years of Thermoforming experience gives them the
expertise necessary to manufacture parts on the cutting edge of
design. As Gerard Furburshaw of Lunar Design says "Freetech
never makes us change our look and feel to fit the process but
stretches the process technology to fit what we need."
These collaborations between designer and former have won many
awards over the years including the top prize for Thermoforming
in 1996 for The Coherent Ultrapulse Laser (which is used for Opthalmology
and plastic surgery).
This year a similar collaboration won an ID (industrial designer)
Magazine award for another laser system for hair removal.
Yes, Pressure Forming has really reached the age of style. With
more processors putting in state-of-the-art Thermoforming machines
and computerized second operation equipment for consistent quality
and results. Improved forming techniques have made it possible
to mold severe undercuts to accomodate hidden fasteners allowing
for cleaner product lines. Now complex rib structures for ventilation
and support that were considered unformable a few years ago are
becoming more common.
These new structural applications, along with the high appearance
look and feel these products provide, have really started to make
Pressure Forming the process of choice for low and medium volume
products. As more Thermoformers add these new technologies and
techniques to their operations this process will continue becoming
an ever more outstanding resource for both the OEM and the Design
community.
Freetech Plastics is just one of the many key manufacturers and suppliers that help make Silicon Valley work. Freetech has been
providing high quality Pressure Forming and Fabrication for the
Medical, Scientific, Telecommunication, and Electronic Enclosure
markets for the past 22 years. They have collaborated with several
highly regarded industrial design firms to produce many award-winning
products.
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