While Oakham School was closed during lockdown, staff used 3D printers and laser cutters from the Design and Technology Department to begin making face shields. They approached local company Rutland Plastics to help them boost productivity, which took them frommanufacturing just a handful a day, to 8,000 a day.
Rutland Plastics’ technical manager, Carl Martin, says they were originally asked to 3D print a number of headbands for the shields, but decided it would be more cost-effective to manufacture a mould tool using the company’s VISI software package, and then injection mould the plastic product from it.
“We received the initial design for the 3D printed product and modified it in VISI to make it injection mouldable. Once that was completed and approved, we designed the tool in VISI using a Meusburger bolster with aluminium bolster plates.”
The design then went into the toolroom and was milled on their Mazak VCN 530C CNC machine with toolpaths created through VISI’s CAM functionality. The process from taking in the initial 3D design, through turning it into a mouldable product, and finalising the mould tool, took less than a week.
When the two-impression mould was setup on the company’s 80-tonne Engel moulding machine, both parts of the headband were formed from a medically-accredited polypropylene every 24 seconds during the production run of 25,000.
To complete the full screen face masks, Oakham School arranged for the headbands to be attached to plastic visors, which were then distributed to front line NHS staff and key workers at hospitals, doctors surgeries, care homes, specialist schools and mental health institutions.
As medical products were already part of Rutland Plastics’ portfolio, they remained fully open during the Coronavirus lockdown, and extended their output with additional components aimed at fighting Covid-19.
The company’s suite of VISI products and modules, from Hexagon’s production software portfolio, has been instrumental in the design and production of a number of mould tools for those products, which include two components for a contactless door-opener. “That device allows doors to be opened and closed without having to touch the handles – particularly important to stop the spread of Coronavirus,” says Martin.
The company is also part of a national consortium geared up to increase the manufacture of ventilators and has taken delivery of a mould tool from Taiwan, moulding ventilator front covers from ABS thermo plastic polymer.