Most product designers hand over a CAD file and call the job done. The toolmaker quotes it, the mould gets cut, the part locks on the first shot — and everyone scrambles. That gap is what AMD Techlab was built to close.
It started with an Arduino and a soldering iron in childhood, and grew — over years of applied work — into professional CAD and full industrial manufacturing engineering. Along the way the same failures kept repeating: zero draft angles, unverified pressure loads, airflow geometry that looked perfect on screen and performed terribly in the real world.
So every service here exists to prevent a specific, documented failure. The DFM audit catches the draft problem. FEA catches the pressure problem. CFD catches the airflow problem. The prototype sprint catches everything else — before tooling money is spent.
This isn't a portfolio business. It's an engineering practice. We don't stop when the model looks good. We stop when we can prove it works.