Keystone Outdoor Gear Drastically Reduces Time to Market With 3D Manufacturing and Crowd Design

3D printing and customer communication quickly brings tailored TakTable accessories to users.

TakTable and accessories

Keystone Outdoor Gear Co (KOGC), the manufacturer of the TakTable™ portable field table, has taken advantage of newer technologies to fulfill special customer requests in a matter of weeks rather than months. By incorporating 3D printing for plastic part production instead of injection molding for their portfolio of TakTable™ accessories, they have quickly expanded their product line to include designs reactive to their user base. This manufacturing change has improved customer focus and decreased time to market in a way that would have been impossible for a small company, or any company, just a few years ago.

Traditional mass manufacturing of plastic parts requires the use of precision steel tools mounted in large presses. These tools take weeks or months to design and build, followed by time-consuming part-validation procedures. The end result is production runs that create thousands of parts. Changes to the parts are slow and costly and often result in obsolete inventory and other expenses.

3D printing, also known as additive manufacturing, uses the same plastics as injection molding but instead of creating the part in one shot, it creates them layer by layer. This process is similar to CNC machining, except adding material rather than removing it. It allows for quick design-test-build cycles to arrive at a finished product in a brief period of time. Afterward, limited production runs can be produced in a matter of hours or days, practically on-demand, leading to agile inventory control.

This flexibility has tradeoffs. Additive manufactured parts may take several hours for a single part to be completed, vs seconds to minutes with injection molding. Material costs are higher too. A printer uses filament sold in spools for $15 or more per kilo, while injection molding plastic is sold in bulk for dollars a kilo. For larger production runs, like the TakTable itself, 3D printing is cost prohibitive. But by adding flexibility to their main product, it was possible to use 3D printing for add-ons.

Alex Sinton, president of KOGC, explains, "Our 3D printed plastic part cost for the telescoping edge bracer, for instance, is about ten times higher than injection molding. This leads to an overall retail price increase of 30% since packaging, hardware, assembly, and shipping are the same." He continued, "But it's important to note that without 3D printing, these products, most of which were suggested by users, would not exist at all. If we only developed what will definitely recoup the investment in hard tooling, we would be lucky to introduce one or two products a year. As it is now, we're introducing a new accessory every month. It really gets our customers excited when they can recommend something and have it in their hands in a week or so. And if one user wants it, somebody else will too."

About Keystone Outdoor Gear - Keystone Outdoor Gear designs and manufactures generational outdoor furniture. Their premiere product, TakTable™, is the ideal folding camp table for outdoor adventures anywhere.

Source: Keystone Outdoor Gear

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Tags: 3D printing, lean manufacturing, manufacturing, product design, taktable


About Keystone Outdoor Gear

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Keystone Outdoor Gear is proud to design and manufacture generational outdoor furniture that you can hand down to your children. Our premiere product, TakTable™, is the ideal folding camp table for outdoor adventures anywhere you roam.

Keystone Outdoor Gear
5645 Ridgeview Dr
DOYLESTOWN, PA 18902
United States