FDM Helps Automotive-Products Supplier Streamline Design

Dana Corporation chooses FDM from Stratasys Inc. in order to create highly accurate prototypes quickly and cost-effectively.

Real Challenge

Dana Corporation (Toledo, OH), a Tier One automotive supplier, assumes responsibility for designing components to meet its customers’ requirements. Validating these designs with prototypes from conventional machining and casting methods required weeks or months and tens of thousands of dollars. The time and expense limited Dana’s use of prototypes.

“By the time a conventional prototype can be made, it’s possible to invest large amounts of time and money in a design that doesn’t work,” says Bruce Vanisacker, designer for Dana’s Rapid Prototyping/CAE Services.

Dana’s products include under-the-hood filtration systems, cooling systems, differential cases, carriers and housings. “It’s often difficult to determine, just by looking at one of our complex assemblies on a computer screen, whether or not it meets key form and fit requirements,” Vanisacker says. “But in the past, when we prototyped new concepts using conventional methods it took too long and was expensive.” Seeking a better way, Dana investigated prototype technology options.

Real Solution

Tired of the excessive time and money being spent, Dana Corporation began to search for a better technique to design their parts.

“We took a cross-section of parts from all of our divisions and sent them to five rapid prototyping system suppliers,” Vanisacker says. One of the processes that they investigated was fused deposition modeling (FDM®) from Stratasys Inc. (Eden Prairie, MN).

“We decided that FDM produced the best parts because it could produce highly accurate and much stronger parts in multiple colors. FDM is also very easy to use and quite economical,” says Vanisacker. Contrasting FDM® to conventional methods, he says, “FDM enables us to produce accurate and specialized functional rapid prototypes in a few days. A physical part gives everyone the opportunity to hold and touch and feel the part and determine exactly where we stand.”

Dana has found that its FDM Maxum excels at making accurate rapid prototypes of complicated assemblies like the clutch assembly shown. “During the design, we add colors to the components to make the most important ones stand out. Then we build the prototypes in the same colors,” says Vanisacker. Dana also uses FDM for more than visualization. “FDM prototypes are so strong that in some cases we even use the prototypes to help evaluate the performance of the part.”

This clutch prototype demonstrated that the initial design concept would not fit the application. Discovering this at an early stage in the design process kept Dana from spending additional time or money on the concept. It also provided a head start in moving towards a new design that did meet the customer’s requirements.

“FDM rapid prototypes have become a regular part of our product development process because they take just a few days and about one-tenth the cost of conventional machining and casting methods,” Vanisacker says. “Spending a few thousand dollars on a prototype saves us months in engineering time.”

For more information on Stratasys visit www.stratasys.com.

Related Suppliers


IMTS 2012
Register today for The MFG Meeting, March 8 - 11, 2012, Orlando, Florida.
3D Printing – The New Frontier for Manufacturing
I had the privilege of touring one of the prominent companies in this rapidly growing field of 3D printing,


Read more


Featured Zones: Hardware | Management | Materials | Processes | Product Development | Software | View More Zones...

Zones | Suppliers | Products | Articles | Calendar | Industry Links | Contact Us

© 2012 AMT-The Association For Manufacturing Technology

All Rights Reserved | About Us