Balancing prototype costs with material performance is a core challenge in product development, requiring systematic thinking and refined strategies. The following is a comprehensive solution based on engineering practices and cost control principles, divided into five key dimensions:

  1. Precisely Define the Core Objectives of the Prototype
  2. Functional Priority Classification
  • Differentiate between critical verification components (such as load-bearing structures and thermal modules) and non-critical components (such as housings and decorative parts). The former must strictly match the final material performance, while the latter can be replaced with downgraded alternatives.
  • Case: In the drone prototype, carbon fiber blades require performance consistency, while the fuselage bracket can be made of glass fiber reinforced nylon (cost reduced by 60%).
  1. Prototype Phase Adaptation Strategy
  2. Intelligent Decision Matrix for Material Substitution

Construct a four-dimensional evaluation model (cost/performance/machinability/supply chain)

Decision rule: Prioritize materials with a gentle cost-intensity slope

III. Cost Reduction Pathways for Advanced Manufacturing Technologies

  1. Hybrid Manufacturing Mode
  • Metal insert molding: Localized high-performance metal components + plastic matrix (cost reduction of 40%-70%)
  • Multi-material 3D printing: Such as Mark forged equipment that simultaneously deposits continuous carbon fiber and thermoplastic polymer
  1. Digital Prototype Verification
  • Reduce redundant material through ANSYS topology optimization (typically achieving over 30% weight reduction)
  • Moldflow simulation predicts injection molding defects and avoids repeated trial runs
  1. Whole Life Cycle Cost Management
  • Implement JIT (Just-In-Time) material management to reduce storage costs
  • Modular design enables component reuse (e.g., universalization of motor mounts)
  • Establish prototype material recycling agreements with suppliers (e.g., metal swarf repurchase)
  1. Dynamic Equilibrium Decision Framework

Establish a quantitative evaluation formula:

Cost-performance index = (Tensile strength / Cost) × Machining speed coefficient × Supply chain stability coefficient

Through this structured decision-making system, the team can control prototype development costs within a reasonable range of 10%-15% of the total R&D budget for new products, ensuring technical feasibility while avoiding the dual pitfalls of “over-engineering” or “insufficient validation.”