The Borneo Post

Japan firm develops hi-tech wheelchair­s

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CHIBA, Japan: In a smal l workshop just outside Tokyo, mechanics hammer, weld and measure as they craft “the Porsche of wheelchair­s” for the world’s top Paralympic athletes ahead of the 2020 Games.

Paralympia­ns using wheelchair­s built by OX Engineerin­g, a small company in the city of Chiba, have won a total of 122 medals since 1996 – making them the gold medal champion among Japan’s main manufactur­ers.

Since Tokyo won the bid to host the 2020 Olympics and Paralympic­s, orders have flown in, increasing by around a fifth every year. The firm now makes about 500 sports wheelchair­s a year for athletes from 21 countries.

“We have the technology to make a wheelchair fit perfectly for each athlete and to help them perform at their best,” company president Katsuyuki Ishii told AFP.

OX Engineerin­g was founded in 1988 by Ishii’s father Shigeyuki who used to sell motorbikes until his life was turned upside down by injury.

Road-testing a new bike, he had an accident that caused spinal injuries and left him paralysed.

He tried out several wheelchair­s and, unable to find a suitable one, finally decided to create his own model.

“My father wanted a wheelchair with a cool design like a motorbike but there was nothing like that around at the time,” Ishii said.

“Then he decided to make one himself.”

Manu f a c t u r i n g s p o r t s wheelchair­s is high- precision work – they have to be specially designed for speed and agility, depending on the sport.

Tennis wheelchair­s, for instance, have two large, angled wheels for stability in quick turns, with two casters wheels at the front and one at the back.

Racing wheelchair­s, on the other hand, look completely different, with two large rear wheels and one small front wheel connected by a long shaft.

The detailed process of designing and manufactur­ing wheelchair­s at OX Engineerin­g remains top secret, but one of the ways the company pioneered to enhance athletes’ performanc­e was to boost the durability of the vehicle.

We have the technology to make a wheelchair fit perfectly for each athlete and to help them perform at their best, Katsuyuki Ishii, company president

Over the years, the company has refined the shape of their pipes to strengthen the equipment. The ability to create personalis­ed equipment is also key, said Ishii.

“Each athlete has a different body shape and type of disability. They all play and race differentl­y.”

“The way the pipes are shaped, the way parts are assembled... everything is tailored” precisely to each athlete, Ishii said.

Shingo Kunieda, who has won 26 Grand Slam tennis titles and three Paralympic gold medals, said a wheelchair must “feel like a part of the athlete’s body.”

“My wheelchair is my feet. So changing a wheelchair is like replacing my feet,” the 35-year- old Japanese star told AFP.

“A wheelchair is made delicately. We feel something is wrong even with a millimetre change,” he said.

It is not the lightness of the equipment that counts but the stability, he explained.

“What I like about my wheelchair is that I have full control of it.”

For Masayuki Higuchi, a middledist­ance athlete who competed at the 2016 Rio Paralympic­s, the most important aspect of the wheelchair is “stability at high speed.”

“We race at a speed of more than 35 kilometres per hour, so it’s important to have stability when cornering in a group,” said the 40-year- old, who started working with OX Engineerin­g three years ago.

As athletes compete for gold on the track, so wheelchair companies are forever trying to outdo each other with cutting-edge technology.

At Rio, US athletes used what auto giant BMW claimed was “the world’s fastest wheelchair”.

The machine, created by BMW’s California- based firm Designwork­s and individual­ly customised, was made from carbon fibre, making it lighter and more shock-absorbent – but also much more expensive.

“Such a wheelchair could cost 3 million yen ( US$ 28,000). An ordinary athlete can never afford that,” Higuchi said.

His own wheelchair costs more than 800,000 yen as it also contains carbon fibre.

Higuchi stressed the need to keep costs down to expand the popularity of Paralympic sport.

“If we cannot win without such wheelchair­s, only a handful of athletes will be able to compete,” he said.

OX Engineerin­g strives to keep costs down as much as possible – between 200,000 and 500,000 yen.

“It’s not very profitable... but our mission is to provide wheelchair­s ordinary people can buy,” said Ishii, adding that he wanted the best for Japanese Paralympia­ns as they competing on home turf.

“We know they want to win no matter what. So our job is to help improve their performanc­e” with the wheelchair, he said. — AFP

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 ??  ?? In this picture taken on Nov 27, 2018, an OX Engineerin­g employee works on a wheelchair at the company’s factory in Chiba. — AFP photo
In this picture taken on Nov 27, 2018, an OX Engineerin­g employee works on a wheelchair at the company’s factory in Chiba. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Japanese paralympia­n Masayuki Higuchi during a training session at a track and field stadium in Noda, Chiba prefecture in this Feb 13 file photo. — AFP photo
Japanese paralympia­n Masayuki Higuchi during a training session at a track and field stadium in Noda, Chiba prefecture in this Feb 13 file photo. — AFP photo

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