Description
Difficult and costly importation of equipment. Lack of customized parts. Unavailable spare parts, especially in the remote areas where supply chains may be disrupted. These are some of the daily challenges faced by the staff of MSF (Médecins Sans Frontières—Doctors Without Borders). The 3D Printing for All project aims to democratize access to 3D printing and solve some of those challenges by getting 3D printing in MSF's projects, and developing procedures and guidelines on how to use it safely and efficiently. Describing design needs, context, and technical parameters for a CAD expert to make a design is critical to the production of the products that solve problems in the field. For the most part, the people who have the problems to solve do not have engineering backgrounds—and yet they have to provide precise information. Throughout the implementation of the project, we've experienced this communication gap, learned valuable lessons on how to minimize the number of iterations, and saved material and time involved in putting a product in use.
Key Learnings
- Learn about communicating engineering design for nonengineers, including how to describe the problem for a CAD expert.
- Learn about sustainable 3D-printing workflows in resource-limited contexts, and learn how to deal with power failures, extreme temperatures, and dust.
- Learn about the mindset that's changing from replicating existing items to creating new solutions using 3D printing.