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by s1artibartfast
768 days ago
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That's not what Im saying. Machined plastics are rarely encountered, but many molded plastic products can be trivially machined. Im saying that the fabrication difficult is driven by design, not material. almost nobody is going to home fabricate a spline gear at home, and it doesnt matter if it is metal or plastic. If something is like a plate or flange, it is trivial to fabricate and doesnt matter if it is metal or plastic. For any given design, I think refabrication is the same or easier for plastic. |
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1) easily-sourced commodity products like standard screws, washers, bolts, etc. 2) barring that, parts that could easily be fabricated by realistic home production methods (hand tools, FDM printing, possibly simple machining) 3) barring that, parts that the consumer can have easily fabricated by a third party (maybe it requires a 5-axis CNC but all the CAD/CAM files are available to upload somewhere like Shapeways) 4) barring that, easily-ordered at-cost OEM parts
...and in all cases the user manual should require all relevant drawings with dimensions.
The problem is that if you tell an industrial designer to keep costs down, and that they can use injection-molded plastic parts, they will almost certainly NOT design parts that are conducive to 1-3. They could, but all the incentives run the other way, so they probably won't.