17 min

223: Mechanical Prototype Parts vs. Pre-Production Parts for Plastic Inventions Product Startup

    • Entrepreneurship

For nearly a decade, Tim Uys has spearheaded a diverse myriad of design initiatives as the Director of Design at MAKO Design + Invent. During his 25 years in the industrial design and mechanical engineering domains, he has made impactful contributions in senior design leadership and education roles, as well as to renowned companies such as Dell, Nike Golf, Qualcomm, and Ironman. Today, Tim draws from his abundant experience to enlighten modern inventors, startups, and small manufacturers on the disparities between mechanical and pre-production prototypes for plastic components. He will divulge the essential design for manufacturing prerequisites and offer insight into optimizing the plastic product design, engineering, and prototyping journey for maximum efficiency.

Click this link for This Episode's Full Info Page: https://www.makodesign.com/podcast/223-mechanical-prototype-parts-vs-pre-production-parts-for-plastic-inventions/

Key Takeaways in This Episode:
What are the key differences between a mechanical prototype and a pre-production prototype?

Most hardware inventions are either entirely or mainly made of plastic or have some plastic components.

The mechanical prototype helps validate the primary mechanism of the design and the overall invention idea.

The pre-production prototype is the phase in which you put the product design into its intended final format, suitable for mass production, and work on shaping the components to optimize for that format.

There is a wide variety of different types of plastic, and they all have different uses.

Once you finalize the materials selection, the next step is to choose which processes you will use, such as injection moulding.

A lot of hardware startups skip this entire step and choose to proceed to manufacturing with concept CAD. They are missing 3 key prototyping stages: the Rough Prototype, the Mechanical Prototype, and the Pre-Production Prototype.

Skipping these stages could cost you money and time down the line if something is missed.

The fewer features you have for your starter product as a startup, the easier it is to go through all these steps and the more refined each feature will be. 

Keep your feature creep to a minimum. You can add additional features later on!

MAKO Design + Invent: www.makodesign.com
 
Kevin Mako: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kevmako

Producer: MAKO Design + Invent is the original firm providing world-class consumer product development services tailored to startups, small manufacturers, and inventors. Simply put, we are the leading one-stop shop for developing your physical product from idea to store shelves, all in a high-quality, cost-effective, and timely manner. We operate as one powerhouse 30-person product design team spread across 4 offices to serve you (Austin, Miami, San Francisco, & Toronto). We have full-stack in-house industrial design, a href="https://www.makodesign.com/services/mechanical-engineering/" rel="noopener

For nearly a decade, Tim Uys has spearheaded a diverse myriad of design initiatives as the Director of Design at MAKO Design + Invent. During his 25 years in the industrial design and mechanical engineering domains, he has made impactful contributions in senior design leadership and education roles, as well as to renowned companies such as Dell, Nike Golf, Qualcomm, and Ironman. Today, Tim draws from his abundant experience to enlighten modern inventors, startups, and small manufacturers on the disparities between mechanical and pre-production prototypes for plastic components. He will divulge the essential design for manufacturing prerequisites and offer insight into optimizing the plastic product design, engineering, and prototyping journey for maximum efficiency.

Click this link for This Episode's Full Info Page: https://www.makodesign.com/podcast/223-mechanical-prototype-parts-vs-pre-production-parts-for-plastic-inventions/

Key Takeaways in This Episode:
What are the key differences between a mechanical prototype and a pre-production prototype?

Most hardware inventions are either entirely or mainly made of plastic or have some plastic components.

The mechanical prototype helps validate the primary mechanism of the design and the overall invention idea.

The pre-production prototype is the phase in which you put the product design into its intended final format, suitable for mass production, and work on shaping the components to optimize for that format.

There is a wide variety of different types of plastic, and they all have different uses.

Once you finalize the materials selection, the next step is to choose which processes you will use, such as injection moulding.

A lot of hardware startups skip this entire step and choose to proceed to manufacturing with concept CAD. They are missing 3 key prototyping stages: the Rough Prototype, the Mechanical Prototype, and the Pre-Production Prototype.

Skipping these stages could cost you money and time down the line if something is missed.

The fewer features you have for your starter product as a startup, the easier it is to go through all these steps and the more refined each feature will be. 

Keep your feature creep to a minimum. You can add additional features later on!

MAKO Design + Invent: www.makodesign.com
 
Kevin Mako: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kevmako

Producer: MAKO Design + Invent is the original firm providing world-class consumer product development services tailored to startups, small manufacturers, and inventors. Simply put, we are the leading one-stop shop for developing your physical product from idea to store shelves, all in a high-quality, cost-effective, and timely manner. We operate as one powerhouse 30-person product design team spread across 4 offices to serve you (Austin, Miami, San Francisco, & Toronto). We have full-stack in-house industrial design, a href="https://www.makodesign.com/services/mechanical-engineering/" rel="noopener

17 min