The company says it will sell the face shields on its website at cost, at a price to be announced, starting “in the next few weeks.” Amazon has already given some 10,000 units of its newly designed face shields to healthcare organizations and plans to donate an additional 20,000, Brad Porter, a vice president with the company’s robotics group said in a blog post on Thursday. Porter said he expects to list the reusable shields at a significantly lower price than models currently available. Business Insider reported last week that Amazon had reassigned some drone staff to work on face shields.
The products are being built at Amazon’s drone engineering facilities in Washington state—using, at one location, a machine that normally cuts carbon fiber for drone parts to slice screens for the face shields—as well as by contract manufacturers elsewhere. An Amazon spokeswoman said the company aims to have hundreds of thousands available in the next few weeks.
The design built on work by a 3D printing hobbyist group in Washington that was working on face shields when an Amazon employee and member of the group connected with colleagues and offered the company’s aid. Roughly 500 people contributed to the project, the company said. The designs, which Amazon is giving away for free, have been approved by the National Institutes of Health.
(Updated with number of masks being manufactured in the next few weeks. A previous version of this story was corrected to make clear that the 500 people working on the project didn’t all work at Amazon. )
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Molly Schuetz
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