MADRID, Spain – Spanish automaker SEAT launches production of OxyGEN ventilators at its Martorell plant.
With auto production shut down nationwide in Spain, manufacturers are rushing to alleviate a severe shortage of the ventilators that help patients breathe.
SEAT began collaborating with Protofy.XYZ, a company specializing in quickly converting prototypes into real products, to design and assemble a high-quality ventilator. A team of engineers needed only a week to design 13 prototypes and reach the final model.
The OxyGEN ventilator has more than 80 electronic and mechanical parts, but its key component is the electric motor otherwise used to run the windshield wiper of the SEAT Leon, one of the automaker’s best-selling models.
“For the serial assembly of the OxyGEN ventilator, it was necessary to transform the part of the SEAT Leon assembly line into which the part of the subframe corresponding to the front axle was assembled,” Martorell production engineer Nicolas Mora says.
Some 150 employees from different parts of the plant are assembling the ventilators where the front axles of the Leon previously were mounted.
“Modifying an assembly line that manufactures part of the subframe of a car to make ventilators has been hard work involving many areas of the company, and we have spent only a week in it,” says Sergio Arreciado of SEAT’s Process Engineering department.
In addition to SEAT’s efforts, other Spanish automotive manufacturers are working to fight COVID-19.
Grupo Antolin, a major producer of automobile roof coverings, has transformed its plants in Valladolid and Burgos to make gowns for healthcare personnel from the same textile material as that used to make roofs.
In the Autonomous Community of Aragon, filter manufacturer Mann + Hummel Iberica has joined Arpa, a company dedicated to producing mobile field equipment, to make face masks for health-care personnel.