ARRK Australia supplies 500 production units

An ARRK Australia and New Zealand product story
Edited by the Engineeringtalk editorial team Aug 13, 2009

ARRK Australia has supplied 500 pins to Minelab Electronics in just five days using Direct Digital Manufacturing.

Minelab Electronics, a manufacturer of advanced metal detectors, was looking to extend the capabilities of the F3 Mine Detector to better meet its customer-specific applications.

In order to achieve this, the company needed to produce 500 pins.

Rather than having to wait a long time to receive the parts, ARRK Australia offered to produce the parts for Minelab using the Direct Digital Manufacturing (DDM) process.

DDM is a rapid manufacturing process that utilises rapid prototyping technologies to manufacture components directly from computer generated (CAD) data.

As this manufacturing process does not require tooling, it cuts production time to days and allows for design flexibility.

DDM is a suitable technique for custom-made, limited-design or short-run production.

It took approximately 38 hours to build the 500 units at ARRK's Adelaide SLS plant.

The parts were ordered on 28 May and delivered by 1 June.

Minelab Electronics said it was pleased with the quality of the parts and with the rapid delivery.

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