New Balance Using 3D Printing To Customize Shoes
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
New Balance Pushes the Limits of Innovation with 3D
Printing
BOSTON, MA March 6, 2013 – Global athletic leader New
Balance is proud to announce a significant advancement in the use of 3D
printing to customize high performance products for athletes. Utilizing a proprietary process, the brand
is able to produce spike plates customized to the individual needs and desires
of their elite athletes. At the New
Balance Games in January 2013, Team New Balance athlete, Jack Bolas, became the
first ever track athlete to compete in customized, 3D printed plates.
New Balance
has developed a proprietary process for utilizing a runner’s individual
biomechanical data to create hyper-customized spike plates designed to improve
performance. The process requires race
simulation biomechanical data which the New Balance Sports Research Lab
collects using a force plate, in-shoe sensors and a motion capture system. Advanced algorithms and software are then
applied to translate this data into custom 3D printed spike designs.
For the
production of the custom plates, New Balance uses selective laser sintering
(SLS) to convert powder materials into solid cross-sections, layer by layer
using a laser. SLS printing enables the
customization process by allowing for complex designs that could not be
achieved through traditional manufacturing methods. Additionally, SLS printing greatly
accelerates the turnaround time from design to functional part.
“Utilizing
our Team New Balance Athletes to develop the customization process was
extremely helpful”, says Sean Murphy, New Balance’s Senior Manager of
Innovation and Engineering. “We are impressed
with their precise ability to identify and speak to the differences in the
custom options provided. They are
acutely aware of what is happening in their shoes”.
NB Athletes
involved in the development of this process included: 2008 and 2012 US Olympic
Athlete and current 1500m World Champion gold medalist Jenny Barringer Simpson,
2012 US Olympic Athlete Kim Conley, 2012 Great Britain Olympic Athlete Barbara
Parker and 4 time All-American runner in the 800m, 1500m and the Mile Jack
Bolas. These athletes provided key feedback in order to develop spike plates
that spoke to each individual athlete’s personal preference, biomechanics and
specific race needs.
In addition
to printing semi-rigid parts like spike plates for track runners, New Balance is
working on softer SLS printed components that mimic the cushioning properties
of foam midsoles. This
initiative will be critical to bringing the customization process to a broader
audience of athletes .
“With 3D
printing we are able to pursue performance customization at a new level to help
our elite NB athletes and eventually all athletes. We believe this is the
future of performance footwear and we are excited to bring this to consumers,”
says New Balance President and CEO Robert DeMartini. “As the only major
athletic brand to manufacture shoes in the U.S., we are proud to invest in
American workers. Developing our
printing capabilities could ultimately help us further invest in the American
worker by adding highly technical positions to our already skilled labor force
in Massachusetts and Maine.”
About New Balance
New Balance,
headquartered in Boston, MA has the following mission: Demonstrating
responsible leadership, we build global brands that athletes are proud to wear,
associates are proud to create and communities are proud to host. New
Balance is currently the only athletic shoe company that manufactures footwear
in the U.S. with 25% of our U.S. footwear shipments produced at five New
England facilities. The company also operates a manufacturing facility in
Flimby, U.K. New Balance employs more than 4000 associates around the
globe, and in 2012 reported worldwide sales of $2.4 billion. To learn more
about how New Balance Makes Excellent Happen, please visit http://www.newbalance.com.
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