There’s very little anymore that we can’t say that 3D printing has improved, but are we taking it a bit too far when we suggest that it might help keep you dry on a rainy day? No! Of course not!
The Cypress Umbrella gets right to the heart of one of the umbrella’s fundamental flaws: its tendency to flip out under the pressures of high wind. As someone living in the Carolinas right now, the combination of high wind and continual rain is something very much on my mind. There is a visceral anger that I feel when my umbrella betrays me by rejecting its useful shape and becoming something almost worthy of being sculpture, maybe titled UNworkable Canvas with eXo-Skeleton.
There is a reason why umbrella design has not changed much over the past century. It’s a project that is a great deal more complicated that it might initially appear. Luckily, Ho and Truong had access to the Vancouver Hack Space (with its entertaining acronym VHS, a tip of the hat to obsolete technology).
Over a period of 10 months, the duo worked tirelessly to bring their dream to life, as they explained:
“We listed every feature that we liked amongst current umbrellas and everything we would want in ours. Working out of the Vancouver Hack Space, the past 10 months has been an endless cycle of design -> fabricate -> test -> break -> repeat. We had to redesign almost every component. Leveraging the strength of a tubular profile, we came up with a new architecture for how the ribs would expand and contract. Unhappy with how an umbrella flips inside out so easily, we invented an independent suspension systems to defend against strong winds.”
None of this would have been possible without 3D printing…or at least, it wouldn’t have been ready for the rainy season any time soon.
In an interview with 3DPrint.com, Truong described the role played by 3D printing:
“3D Printing is essentially the catalyst that accelerated our development stages. Normal prototyping methodology would be to design and then send drawings out for fabrication. This process is time consuming and expensive. With 3D printers, we can design, test, and make changes right away. In our current umbrella, aside from the stem, ribs, and pins, the rest of the umbrella’s frame is 3D printed: the clips, the slider, hubs, handle…we even 3D printed springs.”
They were able to undertake nearly a dozen design iterations just with the main slider, all because of the freedom to experiment allowed by 3D printing. In the end what it boils down to is a better umbrella, a project that has been neglected for far too long.
I can’t wait to see which one of life’s irritations this dynamic duo sets out to conquer next. Let us know your thoughts on this story in the 3D Printed Cypress Umbrella Forum thread on 3DPB.com.