Michigan Manufacturing Technology Center

Unhinging Lightweighting from Past Constraints of Design and Materials

 

Source: Industry Week

 

Open any garage today and the vehicle you’ll find inside is likely to contain components achieved by lightweighting methods. In fact, it’s a practice that goes back to the days of removing backseats from the cars we inherited from older siblings because the drive for speed and basic economics together has always propelled designers, engineers, and backyard gearheads to find a way to produce a lighter vehicle.

Industry Week recently took a look at the technology and materials that mark the road to development of today’s parts made from ultra-high-strength blends of steel, aluminum, magnesium, and carbon fiber, relying on next-gen design software and techniques such as additive manufacturing and resulting in lighter and stronger vehicles and vehicle components.

Gregory E. Peterson, principal materials engineer for the Michigan Manufacturing Technol­ogy Center, a consulting organization that helps manufactur­ers improve profits and performance, “points to the lightweighting rule that a 10% weight reduction leads to a 6% to 7% increase in fuel economy.”

The Michigan Manufacturing Technology Center helped develop an aftermarket Corvette (C2) frame that is lighter and stronger than the original.

Carmakers are responding with forwarding thinking business changes that include workforce, design, and footprint. For example, GM is focusing on electric or fuel-cell powered vehicles, which will require a paradigm shift in part production — in just about every aspect of its current manufacturing protocol. How does this look on the ground, in the lab, where the decisions are matter?

Why does a seat belt bracket look the way it does? Because of machining requirements. But what if machining was re­placed by additive manufacturing?

“You unhinge yourself from those constraints with gen­erative design. It opens up a whole new set of lightweighting opportunities that we have based on designs we can’t make any other way,” said Kevin Quinn, GM Director of Additive Design and Manufacturing.

 

Read more: “The Road to Lightweighting: The Tech & Materials Leading the Way”

 

 

Photo credit and caption: The Michigan Manufacturing Technology Center helped develop an aftermarket Corvette (C2) frame that is lighter and stronger than the original.

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Lightweight Vehicle Frame Draws Attention from Car Aficionados and U.S. Defense

 

Source: Light Metal Age

 

1963 Chevrolet Corvette Sting Ray

The classic Corvette makes an appearance again in Heat Treat Today‘s Best of the Web feature, this time as a test model for a project that targets development of alternative lightweight vehicle frames.

A growing market demand for alternative lightweight vehicle frames in the custom car market is driving technology “to design a lightweight frame that could be easily morphed into virtually any wheelbase, vehicle length and width without requiring additional tooling,” reports Light Metal Age, and not only are classic car enthusiasts interested, so is the U.S. Department of Defense.

An excerpt:

Beyond replica cars, this frame can be adapted for military applications, as a number of companies working with the Department of Defense have identified the need for a lightweight frame to be used in military vehicles to effectively lighten loads and increase fuel economy.”

First to unveil an innovative lightweight vehicle frame for the aftermarket, based on testing that involved the 1963-67 Corvette (C2 second generation design), was the Michigan Manufacturing Technology Center.

 

Read more: “Manufacturing Technology Center Unveils Lightweight Vehicle Frame”

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