An engineering firm from Gloucestershire, UK has joined forces with GWP Group to manufacture critical PPE for health and care workers. Orthotropic Engineering, based in Quenington, has created the visors after building on work from the field of 3D printing. In total, one thousand of the face visors will be donated.
Matthew Dawson, Director at Orthotropic commented, “Several companies and numerous enthusiasts have started using 3D printers to help make visors. Although this is a great initiative, 3D printing is a fairly slow process more suited to prototyping than serial production. The visor we have created is an adaptation of an open-source design for 3-D printing. However, it can be manufactured immediately and rapidly in large quantities without the need for any bespoke tooling. It’s delivered to where it’s needed in flat-pack form for easy shipping and storage, and can easily be assembled for use in less than a minute.”
Having crowd-funded over £8,000 on Just Giving to cover the cost of materials, Orthotropic turned to packaging manufacturer GWP Group in order to produce the required elements of the visors. This included the fabrication of the foam strip used to provide protection from above, as well as the outer corrugated boxes used to ship the visors.
Dawson added, “We were genuinely blown away by the public response to our fundraising as well as the rapid and generous response of suppliers such as GWP.”
Ian Heskins, Business Development Director at GWP Group, said, “When we were approached by Orthotropic we were only too happy to help. With the material costs covered by the crowdfunding, we were able to provide the manufacturing expertise and capacity at no cost.”
Besides this, the design for the visors has been uploaded to the Orthotropic website, meaning it is freely available for any manufacturing businesses to use in creating more of them if they are able to do so.