Modifications Resources

Frame Materials

Polypropylene

Subortholene

Carbon

EVA

Modifications

Posting

Forefoot Extensions

Pads & Cushions

Frame Modifications

Resources

Orthoses Reaction Force Guide

Impressions & Fabrications

Covering Materials

Rigidity Guide

Frame Materials

Polypropylene

Subortholene

Carbon

EVA

Modifications

Posting

Forefoot Extensions

Pads & Cushions

Frame Modifications

Resources

Orthoses Reaction Force Guide

Impressions & Fabrications

Covering Materials

Rigidity Guide

Frame Materials

Polypropylene

Subortholene

Carbon

EVA

Modifications

Posting

Forefoot Extensions

Pads & Cushions

Frame Modifications

Resources

Orthoses Reaction Force Guide

Impressions & Fabrications

Covering Materials

Rigidity Guide

KevinRoot Medical offers the option for clients to use direct milling through subtractive manufacturing for a patient’s devices. After a patient’s foot model is digitally scanned, technicians take measurements from the patients model to design a frame before it is submitted to the Computer Numerical Control process, which then removes material from a block of polypropylene or EVA to produce the physical frame of the device.

The benefits of using the CNC fabrication method are that it quickly produces frames for multiple pairs of devices simultaneously and makes reordering easy, as the lab stores the digital frame specifications indefinitely. The compromises of using this fabrication method are limitations in frame material options and frame congruency. Orthotic lab CAD technicians are limited in the time they have to design orthotic frames that are perfectly congruent with the patient foot impressions. CAD software shortcuts are used to reduce the time needed to design the digital frame, resulting in an increased variation between the shape and contour of the orthotic frame and the patient’s impression model.

FOOT IMPRESSION METHOD ACCEPTED
Plaster Slipper Cast, Foam Impression, STS Slipper Sock,
3D Scanner

FRAME MATERIAL OPTIONS
Polypropylene, EVA

ADVANTAGES
• Consistent
• Reproducable

DISADVANTAGES
• Some contour loss
• CAD technician design time limitations


KevinRoot offers the option for clients to use direct milling through subtractive manufacturing for a patient’s devices. After a patient’s foot model is digitally scanned, technicians take measurements from the patients model to design a frame before it is submitted to the Computer Numerical Control process, which then removes material from a block of polypropylene or EVA to produce the physical frame of the device.

The benefits of using the CNC fabrication method are that it quickly produces frames for multiple pairs of devices simultaneously and makes reordering easy, as the lab stores the digital frame specifications indefinitely. The compromises of using this fabrication method are limitations in frame material options and frame congruency. Orthotic lab CAD technicians are limited in the time they have to design orthotic frames that are perfectly congruent with the patient foot impressions. CAD software shortcuts are used to reduce the time needed to design the digital frame, resulting in an increased variation between the shape and contour of the orthotic frame and the patient’s impression model.

FOOT IMPRESSION METHOD ACCEPTED
Plaster Slipper Cast, Foam Impression, STS Slipper Sock,
3D Scanner

FRAME MATERIAL OPTIONS
Polypropylene, EVA

ADVANTAGES
• Consistent
• Reproducable

DISADVANTAGES
• Some contour loss
• CAD technician design time limitations

CAD orthotic frame process for direct mill or 3D printing

Polypropylene Frame Milling Process

CNC (Computer Numerical Control) Terminal

Mill Bit Cutting Polypropylene Frame