Hardware Startups with Fexingo: Devices, Robotics, and Manufacturing Tech Companies
In this episode of Hardware Startups with Fexingo, Lucas and Luna explore how hardware startups are using industrial-grade vibration shakers—the same type NASA uses for payload qualification—to test prototype durability before shipping. Lucas explains that a typical multi-axis shaker system costs $50,000 to $150,000, but many startups now access them through shared test labs or rental services for as little as $500 per day. He walks through a concrete case: a medical device startup that avoided a $200,000 recall by catching a resonance-induced solder joint failure during random vibration testing. Luna raises the practical question of when in the development cycle a startup should invest in this kind of testing, and Lucas lays out a simple rule—any product with a battery, a motor, or a screen should see a vibration profile before the first production run. The episode ties back to the broader theme of reliability engineering on a startup budget, and closes with a forward-looking question about how miniaturized shakers could eventually become desktop tools for early-stage hardware teams. #HardwareStartups #VibrationTesting #ReliabilityEngineering #NASAQualified #MedicalDevices #SolderJointFailure #RandomVibration #ResonanceTesting #PrototypeTesting #StartupManufacturing #ProductDevelopment #MechanicalEngineering #QualityAssurance #TestLabRental #EmbeddedSystems #BusinessAndTechnology #FexingoBusiness #BusinessPodcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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