Overview

When a family heat pump stopped working, the issue turned out to be a broken plastic gear in the intake grille mechanism. Instead of replacing the whole unit, I reverse engineered the gear and 3D-printed a replacement part to bring the system back online.

My Role

  • Disassembled the front grille and identified the failed gear.
  • Measured the original part and recreated it in CAD with correct tooth profile and dimensions.
  • Selected print settings and material, printed prototypes, and iterated on the design.
  • Installed and tested the new gear in the unit.

Tools & Technologies

  • Software: CAD (Fusion 360 / FreeCAD), slicer software
  • Hardware: FDM 3D printer, basic hand tools
  • Skills: measurement, tolerance design, mechanical troubleshooting

Key Challenges

  • Getting the tooth profile and clearances right so the gear meshed smoothly with the existing mechanism.
  • Choosing material and print orientation that would hold up to repeated cycles and minor load.
  • Working inside a confined HVAC housing without damaging other components.

What I Learned

  • How to quickly design and iterate a functional replacement part for a real system.
  • The value of combining basic mechanical troubleshooting with digital fabrication.
  • That small, inexpensive fixes can prevent much larger replacements and waste.