Manufacturing technologies are tools, machines, and digital systems that enable production. VCAA requires students to understand which technologies are appropriate at each scale and why.
| Scale | Typical Technologies | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| One-off | Hand tools, manual CNC, 3D printing, laser cutter | Flexibility; no tooling investment |
| Low-volume (batch) | CNC machinery, laser cutting, vacuum forming, semi-automated press | Repeatable with moderate setup |
| High-volume (mass) | Automated assembly lines, injection moulding, die casting, robotics | Speed and consistency |
| Continuous | Automated process control, sensor networks, conveyor systems | Uninterrupted flow |
Computer-Aided Design (CAD)
- Used at all scales for design and modelling
- Enables precise dimensioning, rapid iteration, and digital prototyping
- Essential for feeding data to CNC and CAM systems
Computer-Aided Manufacture (CAM)
- Translates CAD files into machine instructions
- Used in CNC routing, laser cutting, 3D printing
- Most cost-effective at low-to-high volume where setup cost is amortised
Computer Numerical Control (CNC)
- Automated cutting, routing, milling driven by digital coordinates
- Highly accurate; reduces human error
- Cost-effective from low-volume upwards
Injection Moulding
- High tooling cost; very low per-unit cost at mass scale
- Produces identical thermoplastic parts rapidly
- Not viable for one-off or small batch
Robotics and Automation
- Arms, conveyors, automated assembly
- Dominant in mass and continuous production
- Reduces labour cost; improves consistency; raises capital expenditure
3D Printing (Rapid Prototyping)
- Additive manufacturing; ideal for one-off and prototype stages
- No tooling required; complex geometries possible
- Slow and expensive per unit at scale
Laser Technology
- Cutting, engraving, welding
- Precise; minimal material waste
- Versatile across one-off to batch production
EXAM TIP: When asked to evaluate a technology for a given scale, address: capital cost, unit cost, flexibility, accuracy, and sustainability implications.
COMMON MISTAKE: Students confuse CNC (the control method) with a specific machine. CNC is applied to routers, lathes, plasma cutters, and more — always specify the machine type.