French company Decathlon is the world’s largest sporting goods retailer, offering a wide variety of equipment that spans a broad range of recreational and competitive activities. The company is home to over 100 brands and registers scores of patents each year through its research and development teams. The emphasis Decathlon places on innovation are at the core of its competitive advantage, driving high-quality products at cost-effective prices. By keeping operating expenses low through state-of-the-art production processes, an optimized supply chain, and a minimal retail footprint, Decathlon has won a sizable cut of the market, not only in France but across the globe.

Challenges:

Required to engage suppliers to produce the mold master patterns and the typical lead-time from start to finish for projects took around one month.

Solutions:

Gregoire Mercusot, a materials engineer within the additive manufacturing lab (ADDLAB) at Decathlon, seeking a faster way to get robust parts that could withstand the mold-making process. These parts would need the ability to retain shape and detail at temperature exposure as high as 160˚C at 180 bar pressure.  After testing various options, the desired performance came from Figure 4® Modular and it’s material, Figure 4® HI-TEMP 300-AMB, a transparent and rigid plastic engineered to withstand ultra-high temperature environments.

Benefits:

With a reliable material at the ready, ADDLAB 3D printed the fishing weight sinkers and shipped them to its mold supplier within two days for the molds to be created. Beyond the massive time savings, this process introduced, creating the mold master patterns in-house enabled Decathlon to cut additional costs from product development while accelerating time to market. According to Destrebecq, “That’s the magic of in-house 3D printing. I am less stressed in my design and am able to achieve goals that are impossible using a traditional approach.”

Material versatility keeps R&D moving forward across the board

To drive innovation across as many product areas as possible, Decathlon takes advantage of Figure 4’s material versatility to match a diverse range of applications with the best fit of material properties. Mercusot says that in addition to the speed and precision of Figure 4, the platform’s material selection and flexibility put the system in high demand within ADDLAB.

Additional Figure 4® materials in use at Decathlon include:

  • Figure 4® PRO-BLK 10: With fast print speeds of up to 62 mm/hr and thermoplastic-like behavior, Mercusot says Figure 4 PRO-BLK 10 is a practical and effective choice for a wide range of ADDLAB projects. The precision of Figure 4 printing combined with the excellent surface quality of this material help Decathlon iterate with confidence. Part examples include innovative assemblies with retracting and interchangeable attachments;
  • Figure 4® FLEX-BLK 20: This fatigue-resistant black plastic offers the look and feel of production polypropylene and is being used to advance products that will ultimately hit shelves in polypropylene. Part examples are far-reaching, and include items such as bike components;
  • Figure 4® RUBBER-BLK 10: Great for simulating deformation, this slow-rebound, hard-rubber material has found a place at Decathlon for a range of touch applications, with part examples that include grips, tire treads, and shoe insole testing.

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