Lotus F1 Team now has nine of these centers and housessix SLA 3D printer Systems, and three SLS? 3D printers, which today allow direct manufacture of production parts the race cars.
Thomas Mayer, COO at Lotus F1 Team, is in no doubt of the added efficiency these technologies have brought to the team: “The first SLA printed parts were installed in a racecar in 2001 and following their success, we have continued to explore the boundaries of these materials. Since the launch of our Advanced Digital Manufacturing (ADM) Centre in 2002, 3D Systems’ technologies have become an effective new manufacturing process that enabled us to reduce both cycle times and cost, and has added invaluable benefit to the team. On one hand, we enjoy the ability to manufacture multiple iterations of the same part for Wind Tunnel testing while on the other we see the number of sintered components in the actual car grow every year.”
In practical terms, Lotus F1 Team can not only test hundreds of components per month in the Wind Tunnel, but also build some race-car parts directly from digital data using CAD and SLS technology. Designers electronically flag a design as complete and send it, along with the material selection, to the ADM Department. Using SLS, complex car components are produced in hours rather than weeks, and in some cases the part is ready for inspection before the drawing has even passed through the system.
Lotus F1 Team also produces gearbox and suspension components via accurate casting patterns, and can be more creative with their part design now that restrictions on permissible complexities have been removed. The SLA process follows the exact blueprint of their CAD designs, and because the process is so accurate, time is saved on proof machining for the finished casting.
To reduce cycle time and cost, Lotus F1 Team ultimate goal is to use Advanced Digital Manufacturing as a fully industrialized technology to deliver race-ready car parts in volume. Lotus is especially looking forward to 3D Systems’ development of materials that can withstand the punishing environment presented by an F1 car. The intense temperatures (the average temperature of a Formula One car is 250°C) and vibrations present a high hurdle but, like F1, 3D Systems’ technologies are ever-evolving.