While an entrepreneur or company may only occasionally take a concept to market, Finite Engineering regularly works through this process with clients. Engineering design is a key focus of our work and we find enjoyment in the wide variety of projects we get to complete.
As a result, our engineers spend a lot of time training in this area. As we continually work on projects and training exercises, we broaden the scope of our experiences and how we can apply problem-solving skills when a challenge presents itself in a client’s design.
Recently, a member of our Finite team worked on a modeling exercise in which he tried to employ many different part and assembly techniques. Ryan Black, Designer, was looking for something random, yet intricate, that would provide a new engineering design challenge. Black is a mountain biking enthusiast, so he naturally gravitated to the idea of designing a 10-speed suspension mountain bike based on the Google image of a popular model. Since the design did not need to be precise, it was all based on visual proportions rather than actual measurements.
Over lunches and breaks, Black worked on the design in SolidWorks for about two weeks. Sweeps of varying profiles provided the basics to model the frame and handlebars, while surface modeling techniques allowed him to design the seat. The assembled bike utilizes mechanical mates, such as a belt mate that allows the cranks to be turned. This realistically drives the chain and the rear sprocket to turn the rear wheel. The approach to the design was frame, handlebar, seat, mechanical components, and then wheels and tires.
Designing a bike in your spare time isn’t just for fun. Here at Finite Engineering, we constantly challenge our team and offer opportunities for training and growth. This equips the engineer for more variety in their work, which ultimately benefits the client. The engineer is better able to deliver designs on complicated models with efficiency, saving the client time and money.
A valuable member of the Finite Engineering team, Black has quickly adapted to the mechanical side of engineering after beginning his career in architectural design. He is known as a go-to resource for efficient design work, consistently delivering results over and above the expectations. Black is proficient in SolidWorks, Inventory and CREO.
Team member Adam Sheridan said, “If you can dream it, we can create it. I am always fascinated to see the process from idea to concept, and then to complete digital model. Every part gets designed as part of a larger picture. One by one, they each come together, fit together, and work together to create something greater than the sum of their parts!”
When your company has an idea for a new product, contact the team at Finite Engineering to find out about the process of engineering design. They are proficient at taking what is an unfamiliar process to many companies: taking an idea from concept to market. Your first step in getting your product to market is a consultation with Finite Engineering.
MOW Equipment Solutions, Inc., based out of Lenexa, Kansas, specializes in railroad maintenance equipment. MOW stands for Maintenance of Way, which includes a wide variety of parts and machines designed specifically for railroad repairs, upgrades and maintenance.
Stereotaxis is a St. Louis-based company that uses magnetic fields to guide magnetic tips in medical equipment, such as in catheters and guidewires. The company’s products are diverse and consist not only of the large system that is external to the patient, but also the opposite end of the spectrum, the devices that go inside the body.
Trying to finish a project without an expert engineering team can be a real drag. That’s what Arizona-based Elite Equipment was finding as they tried to develop a new product, an arena drag that would till and smooth the surface inside large horse show arenas. The owner of Elite Equipment, Jesse Boyd, constructs high-end horse arenas. Boyd believed that he could design an arena drag that was a significant improvement over the current models available.
Lenexa Manufacturing Company in Lenexa, Kansas, is owned by a family that has been baking for over a century. This passion for baking equips them to help bakers automate their slicing and bagging with high-tech equipment, improving efficiency and line speed to bag one loaf every second.
ZGC ran into a problem when one of their two CBUs was installed. It had a vibration issue and over the last few years this issue has been destroying the machine foundations. For a machine that is the width of two Mississippi barges, this was a significant challenge. The problem was in the design, but ZGC needed a way to fix it.
As a manufacturer-supported supplier of steel shipping racks across a variety of industries since 2000, SPS Ideal Solutions, Inc. creates custom designs to the specifications of each client. Some of the key industries they support are flexible packaging film, film for the tape industry, steel, aluminum coils, fabricated components, vehicle panels and finished engines.
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