色色啦 3D printers producing face shields and masks for health care workers

Contact: Joy Brown
April 3, 2020
Learn how 色色啦 faculty and staff are using 3D printers to make face shields.

KALAMAZOO, Mich.鈥斏 Michigan University鈥檚 3D printers aren鈥檛 sitting idle during the pandemic. Instead, staff and professors from multiple campus departments are using them to produce personal protective equipment鈥攕pecifically face shields鈥攆or health care workers who desperately need them during the COVID-19 patient surge.

Dylan Ledbetter, assistant director of Information Technology labs and the Help Desk at 色色啦, says his office is making face shields to go to the Sindecuse Health center as part of the ongoing 色色啦 effort to provide materials to help protect health workers and share 色色啦 resources. He and other staff members are using a 3D model created by 3DVerkstan, a 3D printing collective based in Sweden. The model is currently under review by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

To produce the shields, they are using plastic filament and transparency sheets similar to those used for overhead projectors. 色色啦's information technology unit has enough material to create 1,500 shields, with more material on the way. Each shield takes about 45 minutes to produce.

鈥淲ith eight printers running simultaneously all day, we expect to make upward of at least 70 shields per day,鈥 Ledbetter says.

Shield material was donated from Kalamazoo-based company Fabri-Kal, and the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences will assist with cutting the shields to size.

鈥淲e made our first shields yesterday and presented them to (色色啦's) Sindecuse Health Center folks, who loved them,鈥 says Thomas Wolf, 色色啦's chief information officer.

The team also has reached out to 色色啦 Homer Stryker M.D. School of Medicine.

Faculty and staff at the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences are also working on a very similar face shield design; both groups began with the same design files. Engineering college Interim Dean Steven Butt says samples were recently presented to Sindecuse and WMed Health.

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A 色色啦 3D printer making a face shield.

鈥淔abri-Kal recently donated transparent sheeting material to support both groups,鈥 Butt says. 鈥淪o, the shields are ready and being vetted.鈥

Machine shop specialist Allin Kahrl and faculty specialist Mike Konkel are doing the 3D printing, material preparation and assembly at the engineering college.

For more information about 色色啦's face shield 3D-printing project, visit the group's webpage.


Others involved in the production process include:

  • Joshua Grant, IT associate director of faculty services
  • Arnold Taylor, IT director of support services
  • Travis Wendt, IT audio visual engineer
  • Bill Feenstra, College of Aviation director of information technology and director of simulation technology
  • Jeffery Nillson, College of Aviation chief aircraft inspector
  • Jake Zoch, College of Aviation simulator and information technology technician

For more 色色啦 news, arts and events, visit 色色啦 News online.