I was in San Diego on Thursday to speak at the AUVSI's Unmanned Systems Interoperability Conference and to do a Bloomberg TV segment on 3D Robotics/DIY Drones. This was a good opportunity to tour the new factory, which is now in its own 10,000 square foot building with 15 full-time employees. (3D Robotics is the company that powers the DIY Drones store). This is what it takes to do high-end electronics at the volume and scale we're now operating at. It's a long way from the garage we started in ;-)
Here are some photos from the new space.
Above: the main PCB production line. From left: the automated stencil printer, the pick-and-place machine with autofeeders and the reflow oven. This is where the magic happens!
Carmen, who runs the QA station at the end of the PCB production line. She tests every board that comes out!
These are just a few of the test jigs.
Here's Alan and the cool new 3D printer. You won't believe the new products they're working on ;-)
The CNC machine making ArduCopter frame parts
Some Bixler and EasyStar APM enclosure parts made by the CNC.
Jordi and software engineer Pat Hickey in front of the pick-and-place machine
Accounting and office management
Bloomberg host (and former MTV VJ) Tabitha Soren raiding the refrigerator in the kitchen.
Here's the other end of the production line, showing the PCB cutter and reflow oven
Component reels, waiting for the pick-and-place
The engineering area has monitors turned sideways to read LOTS of Arduino code ;-)
Hmm..what are these? Could it be a new product? Hint: they're not cameras ;-)
We've even got our own forklift!
Electronics engineering stations look like this
Comments
BTW, if you need any electrical cables, let me know, I work for a manufacturer. ie: I'm thinking small shielded twisted stuff.
coooooooooollll factory :D I loved the forklift, if you need a janitor, I offer myself lololol keep on guys, loved the way things are going ! hope to have some time to install git and retake the wiki translation, but school has been taking all my time... telecomunications, mathematics and stats & probs, if anyone volunteer ...
Awesome!
Haha! I'd give pretty much anything to work in a company such as this...well maybe more so if I was studying to become an engineer. ;-) So much interesting stuff happening over there.
Great tour!
Wow, most impressive facilities! Don't know what I was thinking (I obviously wasn't), but I pictured a couple guys in a garage. Nice.
Sean
What type of CNC machine is that?
Wow. Neat factory!
Thanks for the tour, Chris. Aside from the optical flow sensor, can you give us any ideas of more goodies to come? Looking forward to the Bloomberg segment!
We're a Solidworks shop, but I think anything that outputs STL is probably okay.
@Chris: what type of CAD data can you guys work with? I have AutoCAD, but not much for 3D modelling.