Jabil Inks Additive Manufacturing Agreement to Supply Parts to Renault F1 Team

On-demand delivery of racecar parts for Renault F1 Team driven by expansion at certified Jabil 3D printing facilities worldwide.

By DE Editors    May 23, 2019         

Email Sign Up

Get news, papers, media and research delivered. Sign up for our free newsletters.

Stay up-to-date with news and resources you need to do your job. Research industry trends, compare companies and get weekly market intelligence with Robotics 24/7.

Robotics 24/7 newsletter

Jabil has announced an additive manufacturing agreement with Renault F1 Team to speed the development and delivery of 3D-printed racecar parts for the Renault R.S.19, competing in the 2019 Formula One World Championship. Through the Jabil Additive Manufacturing Network, Renault F1 Team will gain fast and efficient access to top-quality parts.

“We’re excited to be part of Renault F1 Team’s strategy to improve performance with additive manufacturing,” said John Dulchinos, VP of digital manufacturing, Jabil. “Our ability to consolidate a global supply chain and scale qualified processes as needed will enable the production of chassis and on-car components in record time.”

An early adopter of additive manufacturing, Renault F1 Team continually seeks opportunities to produce racecar parts quickly and economically while reducing vehicle weight and without compromising part strength or integrity.

“Every single aspect of what we do is geared towards excellence. We look forward to taking advantage of Jabil’s growing ecosystem of certified materials, processes and machines to boost parts availability and overall productivity,” said Antoine Magnan, head of partnerships, Renault Sport Racing.

Recent expansions to the Jabil Additive Manufacturing Network are designed to address the 3D printing needs of highly regulated industries. Additional 3D printing capacity has been added to Jabil’s Detroit-area manufacturing facility in Auburn Hills to support expanding automotive and healthcare applications. The facility, which is ISO 13485 certified, offers customers access to machines for high-speed sintering, selective laser sintering and fused filament fabrication.

At Jabil’s AS9100 certified facility in Seattle, aerospace and defense customers can benefit from the company’s manufacturing rigor, supply chain orchestration and strict quality control processes. Jabil now has more than 200 3D printers at facilities connected to the Jabil Additive Manufacturing Network, spanning sites in the United States, China, Hungary, Mexico, Singapore and Spain.

Expanded additive manufacturing capabilities are complemented by Jabil Engineered Materials, which are custom polymer formulations and compounds produced according to ISO 9001 Quality Management System standards. As part of its open-systems approach, Jabil works with 3D printers from industry leaders including Desktop Metal, EOS, Farsoon, HP and Ultimaker.

Sources: Press materials received from the company and additional information gleaned from the company’s website.

About the Author
DE Editors

DE Editors

DE's editors contribute news and new product announcements to Digital Engineering 24/7 and the Robotics 24/7 sites. Press releases may be sent to them via [email protected].

More about DE Editors

Latest in Rapid Prototyping and Manufacturing Services

Latest in 3D Printing

Article Topics

3D Printing   News   3D Printing   Automotive   Jabil   Materials   Prototype Manufacture   Rapid 2019   Rapid Prototyping and Manufacturing Services  

All topics

Editors' Picks

Robotics Invest 2026: Robotics investors, entrepreneurs and tech innovators meet in Boston
Robotics Invest 2026: Robotics investors, entrepreneurs and tech innovators meet in Boston

Cybernetix Ventures’ event kicks off Robotics Tech Week 2026 slate of events

Automate 2026: Cameras, components, drives, grippers, motors, sensors & more
Automate 2026: Cameras, components, drives, grippers, motors, sensors & more

Preview the manufacturing and warehouse components that will be on the…

Automate 2026: AMRs, cobots, humanoids, orchestration platforms, software systems & more
Automate 2026: AMRs, cobots, humanoids, orchestration platforms, software systems & more

Preview the manufacturing and warehouse robots and software that will be on…