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Facilities
The
Forrest Wade Rapid Prototyping Laboratory
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The F.W.
Rapid Prototyping Laboratory was first established with an
NSF Instrumentation and Equipment Grant in 1988, matched by
Cooper Union, and then continually enhanced with three more
NSF grants and a series of equipment grants originated from
Cooper Union, the Kresge Foundation, the Howard Hughes Foundation,
and the Forrest Wade Foundation.
Since its inception, the F.W. Rapid Prototyping Laboratory
has evolved into a state-of-the-art instructional facility
capable of supporting courses in the areas of product development
and general computer-aided engineering disciplines. The Laboratory
now houses a PUMA 762 Robot, a Brideport Interact 412 Milling
Machine, a tabletop LightMachine turning center, a Max/NC
Milling Machine, a Morgan plastic injection molding machine,
a 3-D Systems Actua 2100 rapid prototyping station,
a Cyberware 3-D scanner, a Microscribe 3-D digitizer, and
a network of engineering graphics workstations supporting
a suite of engineering design, analysis, and manufacturing
software tools: CATIA, ADAMS, Cosmos, MasterCAM, ProCAST,
and SolidWorks. A FreeForm interactive sculpting system, by
SensAble Technologies, was installed in January 2002 to initiate
cross-disciplinary, project-based learning offered to students
from both the engineering and the art schools.
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