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Designing Adaptive Skis for Folks with Disabilities Utilizing 3D Printing


September 2019 Hacker of the Month Oliver Vaughan-Jones is a design engineer working to create an adaptive sit-ski for individuals with disabilities.

Posted on August 27, 2019

by

Chris Morgan

Our September Hacker of the Month, Oliver Vaughan-Jones, is an out of doors, snow-sports fanatic that comes from a design engineering background in central Wales. 

Oliver began his journey into 3D printing early – his father was a dentist who used 3D design and printing to recreate jaws and dental molds for his follow. Seeing the advantages of the expertise early on, Oliver was already accustomed to the ideas and purposes of 3D printing when he enrolled in Brunel College in 2008 to review design engineering. Oliver additionally labored as a snowboard teacher and was very keen about snow sports activities.

Throughout his third yr, the scholars have been tasked with making use of for jobs that have been related to their diploma programs. Right here, Oliver landed a possibility working with Gillette’s analysis laboratory close to London.

A few of Oliver’s sketched designs for the sit-ski

Oliver explains, “It was there, as idea engineers, we got here up with concepts, designs after which used a spread of 3D printers and stereolithography to create modern idea razors. In reality, again in 2008, the analysis lab already had a division of 4 or 5 employees devoted solely to taking the CAD information from the designers and making their prints for them – what luxurious!”

However throughout his time at Gillette, Oliver turned extraordinarily ailing and was identified with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), a neurological spectrum situation that may have an effect on individuals to various levels. Oliver was hit extraordinarily exhausting by the situation, and he has spent the final eleven years bed-bound virtually 90% of the time, and he usually has difficulties with pondering and focus. However Oliver is greater than his situation – beneath all the pieces, he’s nonetheless a design engineer and a snow-sports fanatic at coronary heart, and he’s on a mission to make hitting the slopes a actuality for others who share his love of the mountains.

Cardboard mock-ups of some sit-ski parts

Cardboard mock-ups of some sit-ski components

Decided to make a distinction for himself and others, Oliver began portray in 2017 to boost consciousness of ME in addition to funds – 20% of the gross sales of his work go to analysis right into a treatment for myalgic encephalomyelitis. As soon as his art work gained some traction, he was capable of transfer ahead along with his subsequent aim: designing and making a sit-ski; an adaptive machine for many who can’t stand, however nonetheless have upper-torso mobility, that can allow them to shred on the slopes once more.

As soon as he began, he found that a lot of the present tools is extraordinarily cumbersome and prohibitively costly in lots of circumstances. He felt that he may do a greater job at designing a lighter, extra reasonably priced sit-ski regardless of his situation.

A gallery of Oliver's art to raise awareness for ME

A gallery of Oliver’s artwork to boost consciousness for ME

So for the final eight months, Oliver has been designing an adaptive sit-ski from scratch, largely from his mattress. Oliver began with sketches to idea his design and shortly made life-size fashions for cardboard cutout fabricating. On the similar time, he took to YouTube to learn to use Fusion 360 so he may begin to 3D print his cardboard ideas. Oliver’s major design targets are to develop a platform that has a extra user-friendly value level, is extra adaptive to extra customers, in addition to extra light-weight from a supplies standpoint.

Oliver explains, “There are numerous concerns; rider weight, rider skill-level, ski-lift entry, materials choices, materials thicknesses, and shock absorbers to call just a few. The 3D printing is permitting me to mannequin my concepts up shortly to see if the mechanics work and, extra importantly, the ergonomics. For instance, some individuals is perhaps lacking limbs or have buildings like prosthetics that should be accommodated. Dexterity is one other main consideration; poor gripping power is a matter for me and I would like to incorporate buttons or straps which can be straightforward to find and use. Like all design work, it’s juggling many components on the similar time and making an attempt to deliver it in beneath funds. I’ve already modeled a full-scale prototype and I’m aiming for a totally practical prototype by November. Nonetheless, the easy aim is to have one thing I can journey on! I’m outpriced to purchase a ski outright and leases are usually not doable. It is a ardour challenge for me and I can’t wait to journey this winter!”

Sketch showing leg-brace details of the sit-ski

Sketch displaying leg-brace particulars of the sit-ski

Oliver is at present working with a Creality CR10S Professional and a Flashforge Dreamer to create his 3D prototypes. Oliver gained invaluable perception into all the pieces from mattress leveling, altering the belts, the nozzle, the hotend and lots of different sides of 3D printing utilizing the CR10S. Nonetheless, his favourite printer is the Flashforge Dreamer, because it has been extremely in keeping with virtually each materials he’s thrown at it from PLA to ABS and nylon. He additionally makes use of simplify3D as his slicer because it offers nice management over slice settings and contains a big selection of appropriate printer profiles. Proper now, he’s trying to find a secure 3D printer with a bigger mattress to accommodate the bigger print quantity he’ll want for a few of his prototype components. His overarching aim, as soon as his prototypes have been examined, is to manufacture usable components with NylonX for excessive power and sturdiness.

A traditional sit-ski in action

A conventional sit-ski in motion

Like all designers, Oliver hopes that 3D printers and supplies will proceed to return down in value to make extra advanced purposes out there and reasonably priced for everybody. “I’m effectively conscious of how very new I’m to 3D printing and I don’t have nice information or expertise in it past the home sub-$1000 vary so far as equipment goes. It does nonetheless really feel like far more of an artwork kind fairly than a science to me. I think about home printers of the longer term to take over the laborious duties of correct automated self-leveling, nozzle cleansing and to have higher sensors so when issues begin to go flawed, they will self-regulate. I believe we’re going to see bigger print volumes come onto the market imminently and having simply been despatched a pattern from a metallic 3D printer, I can see the longer term in a number of materials printing with totally different supplies being printed inside one print (complexities like shrinkage charges for every materials calculated beforehand). Past that, I think about one of many subsequent main leaps can be some kind of printed circuitry which can be integral as a part of the design.”

We’re extraordinarily excited to see the finished sit-ski that Oliver is designing, and we hope that the usage of NylonX within the design makes it essentially the most rugged sit-ski available on the market!

When you’re concerned about studying extra about Oliver and his initiatives and work, you may go to the next web sites:

For Oliver’s art work: https://www.ovjart.com/

To go to Oliver’s YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLK4iUyxNVlXgQ7hAXCxA_w

Oliver hard at work on his fabrication of the sit-ski

Oliver exhausting at work on his fabrication of the sit-ski

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