Go to homepage
5 / 15
Aug 2016

On our platform we see a lot of visual prototypes being printed.

With a visual prototype I mean a prototype that resembles the actual product in look, feel, material, and dimensions. A visual prototype captures the size and appearance, but not the functionality, of the intended design.

These visual prototypes are of course printed with the goal to learn something from them by conducting research. My question to you is what do you mainly use visual prototypes for? In other words, what are common research questions you are trying to answer through visual prototyping?

Example research question:

How are the product aesthetics perceived compared to similar competitive products?

1. Are the mechanical clearances and tolerances in accordance with design specifications. (Does it work like you want it to)

2. Is it as useful as you though it would be?

not sure why anyone would bother with a visual prototype… with current 3d printing materials just about any working prototype is now possible… perhaps not durable but still working/functional… I’d feel shortchanged if you presented me with a prototype that I can only look at when I know I can get close to a fully working model elsewhere.

10 days later

It would be cool to see some of your own sample parts. It sounds impressive the level of print strategy you put in, not to mention the machine construction itself. In reference to my previous comment, for us, the ‘off the shelf’ commercial FDM solutions just didn’t give us what we were looking for, with a plug-n-play approach.