
FEATUREARTICLE
Rapid Tooling Is Not the Future; It Is Today!
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For more information contact Todd Grimm of Accelerated Technologies, Inc. (Cincinnati, OH) at (606) 334-3875.
For the moldmaking and injection molding industries, the competitive pressures are monumental. Competing on price is no longer a viable option due to the low-cost solutions available from offshore companies. Competing on quality is not viable, because in today's market quality is no longer a feature that provides benefit - now it's a standard expectation and requirement. The issue today is speed. Companies in every industry are focused on delivering product to market faster. The ability to help the customer achieve this objective results in a competitive edge. Rapid tooling positions the moldmaker and molder to meet the customer's requirements and gain a competitive advantage. Without a rapid tooling solution, many claim that a company's competitive position is precarious. However, the necessity of a rapid tooling solution is dependent upon the definition of "rapid tooling." Rapid Tooling Defined At its inception, rapid tooling was the ability to generate core and cavity inserts as a product of a rapid prototyping technology. Rapid tooling was the result of an additive process driven by 3-D CAD - a process that requires little or no machining or EDMing. For some, rapid tooling continues to be described in this narrow scope. Others, however, have embraced a description of rapid tooling that has expanded to a much broader scope. Perhaps the most important factor to this change was the use of the adjective "rapid." Since the opposite of rapid is slow, a company that cannot claim to be a rapid tooler could be perceived as a "slow" tooler. A secondary driver is the attractiveness of the phrase "rapid tooling." Inclusion of "rapid tooling" in advertising and literature attracts the attention of buyers and results in sales. Rapid tooling has become a loosely defined buzzword. The resulting broad definition of rapid tooling has evolved to describe any method that delivers tools in substantially less time than would be expected from a historical perspective. Loosely, this translates to the delivery of a prototype tool and sample shots in three to six weeks. Rapid Tooling - Narrow Definition "New process delivers inserts in two weeks!" is a frequent statement in trade journals. What the provider of the advertised rapid tooling process does not state is that a two-week delivery is based on ideal circumstances such as no backlog, ideal part size, ideal part geometry and reasonable molding parameters.
When the requirements and the component's definition match the capabilities of the rapid tooling technology, magic can happen. Leadtimes can be slashed. There are powerful rapid tooling solutions available today. Of the dozens of processes, each one can claim numerous success stories where their clients have dramatically reduced price and time. Rapid tooling is a powerful solution when it is selected as the right tool for the job.
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