Gizmo bridge 2010, a shout out to Garmin ID
While Panbo's logo is still a work in progress, check out the sharp name plate Gizmo is sporting, thanks to Garmin's industrial design department. Gander too at how much electronic goodness I managed to squeeze onto the boat's latest flying bri...
While Panbo's logo is still a work in progress, check out the sharp name plate Gizmo is sporting, thanks to Garmin's industrial design department. Gander too at how much electronic goodness I managed to squeeze onto the boat's latest flying bridge dash, and note that a wider view would also show a Furuno MFD12 and a Raymarine E140 Wide with room for more! It's quite the testing platform and you'll be seeing lots of pictures and screen shots taken here, but today let's tour that cool design shop in Kansas...
I've already written one entry about the design capabilities I saw during my Garmin visit, but I didn't mention how the ID team showed off their chops, and their collection of rapid prototyping machinery, by whipping up Gizmo plates in several different medium. The semi-transparent ones below at left, for instance, are fairly quick to make -- via a 3D printing process -- but not very sturdy, while it took some serious computer driven cutting heads a while to cut the silver/gray beauty (now on my dash) out of solid aluminum stock. And ideally you'd want such a variety of prototyping techniques as you went from modeling numerous possible designs to refining the finished one...

