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Making a Difference to Get Back on Track

By designing a chair that employs tracks instead of wheels, Tim Swenson of Action Manufacturing made a difference in the life of his paralyzed son – and delivered the ultimate in transportation for all those confined to wheelchairs.

Posted: March 19, 2018

Available in 16 different models, each Action Trackchair is custom and made-to-order. They appeal to those who long for the recreational mobility that they once had or were never able to experience, but are also attractive to disabled farmers and others with occupations that demand some level of physicality. They are also a hit with small children, disabled veterans and amputees from all over the world.
Radan CAM software has cemented the manufacturing of precision parts with extremely tight tolerances for the ultimate in performance. Holes are programmed so tight that they’re oversized for the paint and the primer, with just enough room so that the paint won’t crack when everything is assembled. All of the holes that were previously drilled are now cut with a laser. A tape measure is only used once when programming the chair. (first view)
Radan CAM software has cemented the manufacturing of precision parts with extremely tight tolerances for the ultimate in performance. Holes are programmed so tight that they’re oversized for the paint and the primer, with just enough room so that the paint won’t crack when everything is assembled. All of the holes that were previously drilled are now cut with a laser. A tape measure is only used once when programming the chair. (second view)
The Action Trackchair employs tracks instead of wheels to deliver the ultimate in transportation. This innovation was virtually nonexistent until the Action Trackchair was introduced to the market in 2009.
Action Manufacturing's expanding product line includes an ActionTrack porter for transporting deceased livestock, and a line of robots.
Action Manufacturing uses a Mazak CO2 laser that is equipped with Radan software. The shop plans to install another CNC laser, as well as a press brake, as part of their ongoing expansion.
The shop has added 12,000 sq ft of building space that will be greatly needed as they continue to expand their line of products and the machinery needed to make them. (first view)
The shop has added 12,000 sq ft of building space that will be greatly needed as they continue to expand their line of products and the machinery needed to make them. (second view)
Available in 16 different models, each Action Trackchair is custom and made-to-order. They appeal to those who long for the recreational mobility that they once had or were never able to experience, but are also attractive to disabled farmers and others with occupations that demand some level of physicality. They are also a hit with small children, disabled veterans and amputees from all over the world.
The shop has added 12,000 sq ft of building space that will be greatly needed as they continue to expand their line of products and the machinery needed to make them. (third view)
The shop has added 12,000 sq ft of building space that will be greatly needed as they continue to expand their line of products and the machinery needed to make them. (fourth view)
The Radbend plug-in allows users to click on the Radbend icon within the SolidWorks interface to easily transfer drawings and associated files into Radbend, which can import assemblies from SolidWorks and prepare flat patterns that are ready for the laser.

Strolling along a sandy beach or through a sun-dappled forest are two of life’s simple pleasures that many of us take for granted. For those confined to wheelchairs, spending time in nature — or even traversing a particularly uneven street — can be difficult or impossible to accomplish, especially without assistance. That’s why Tim Swenson, owner of Action Sports/Midwest Trackchair (Action Manufacturing; Marshall, MN), decided to make a difference. After his then 16-year-old son, Jeff, was paralyzed in an accident in 1998, he took his son’s mobility challenges into his own hands by designing a chair that employs tracks instead of wheels to deliver the ultimate in transportation.

“When you have a family member in a wheelchair, you see a lot more wheelchairs,” says Swenson, who owned a motorsports retail business for 30 years. “After we sold the business to our other son, Jim, we decided that we had to start building something for Jeff because we wanted him to go out and be able to do the things that he did before the accident. He was a typically active boy, and what we came up with is a very unique product.” That unique product was the prototype for Action Manufacturing’s Action Trackchair, an option virtually nonexistent until Swenson’s innovation was introduced to the market in 2009. “There were a few people who made some one-off off-road wheelchairs, but nothing with any quantity,” he says. “We’re really the first ones in the world to produce a quantity of off-road wheelchairs. To go out in the woods and go hunting, or for a walk in the park, there was nothing.”

Swenson is quick to note that, while the Action Trackchair appeals to those who long for the recreational mobility that they once had or were never able to experience, the chair is also attractive to disabled farmers and others with occupations that demand some level of physicality. The innovation is likewise a hit with small children, disabled veterans and amputees from all over the world. Swenson recently shipped a chair to a disabled girl in Kenya – who will drive it with her chin. Available in 16 different models, each chair is custom and made-to-order. “We figure out what size you need, what colors you want, right or left controls, and there are many different accessories you can put on,” adds Swenson.

To manufacture its range of custom-tracked machinery, Action Manufacturing has used the Radan sheet-metal computer-aided-manufacturing (CAM) system by Vero Software Inc. (Forest Lake, MN) since January 2016. Swenson was introduced to this CAM system when he acquired a Mazak CO2 laser cutting system that was equipped with the software. To program parts in Radan, Darren Nelson, the director of fabrication and research and development for Action Manufacturing, creates solid models in the SolidWorks® computer-aided-design (CAD) system by Dassault Systèmes Americas Corporation (Waltham, MA). These solid models are then seamlessly imported into Radan, where a CNC toolpath is applied.

The Action Manufacturing team is pleased to have a CAM system that pairs seamlessly with SolidWorks, which was implemented in 2015. They use Radbend, a Radan product for programming press brakes that serves as a SolidWorks plugin to help users streamline and maximize interoperability between the two systems. The Radbend plug-in allows users to click on the Radbend icon within the SolidWorks interface to easily transfer drawings and associated files into Radbend. “Radbend can import assemblies from SolidWorks and prepare flat patterns that are ready for the laser,” explains Nelson, who uses Radbend to program parts for the press brake, which is not equipped with a CNC control. However, Action Manufacturing plans to install a CNC press brake, as well as another CNC laser, as part of their ongoing expansion.

Nelson credits Radan and Radbend for helping the shop to boost overall efficiency and accuracy while reducing scrap. The shop plans to eliminate paper on the shop floor, which today is used by operators following bending programs output by Radbend. “The operator will just look at the control to see what next step is,” states Nelson. “They’ll be able to just take the part off laser and take it over to the press brake.” The implementation of Radan has cemented the shop’s ability to manufacture precision parts with extremely tight tolerances for the ultimate in performance: “We program the holes so tight that they’re oversized for the paint and the primer, with just enough room so that the paint won’t crack when we put it all together,” adds Nelson. “All of the holes that we used to drill are cut with a laser and we only use a tape measure one time when we’re programming the chair. It makes it almost idiot proof.”

“Idiot proof” manufacturing, which includes a reduction in handling and increase in overall flexibility, reduces stress when it comes to day-to-day processes and makes programming “oddball parts” simpler than ever before. “With the software and the laser, we can build much more accurately, and that has eliminated a massive amount of time and waste for prototyping and manufacturing,” says Nelson. “Before Radan, I’d lay it all out by hand, drill the holes, then take it to the press brake. With the laser, everything is perfect unless you program it wrong – and if you program it wrong, you can easily fix it. If you have some oddball part, you can have it made in 15 minutes.”

Designed initially to help one young man experience life to the fullest, the Action Trackchair has now paved the way for further innovation from Action Manufacturing, whose expanding product line also includes an ActionTrack porter, for transporting deceased livestock, and a line of robots. They have also added 12,000 sq ft of building space that will be greatly needed as they continues to expand their line of products and the machinery needed to make them. “When we started building track chairs, it was a family need that turned into more items and, as we begin to offer more items, we need more and different equipment,” notes Nelson. “We really can’t have one without the other.”

Action Sports/Midwest Trackchair, 301 South Highway 23, Marshall, MN 56258, 507-532-9649, midwesttrackchair.com.

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