The engineer
behind the simulations
Five years of independent CFD and 3D printing work — driven by one idea: simulation should help people build better products, not just fill reports.
Mechanical
engineer.
Solo operator.
I'm a mechanical engineer with five years of hands-on experience in fluid dynamics simulation — working independently, end to end. No agency overhead, no layers of management. Just direct engineering, from first principles to final results.
Every project I take on gets my full attention: understanding the physics, setting up the simulation correctly, and delivering results that actually translate into better design decisions.
Simulation as a tool, not a black box
CFD has the power to reshape how products perform — drag, airflow, thermal behaviour, pressure distribution. But that only matters if someone translates it into decisions. That's where the work happens: taking complex simulation data and turning it into clear, actionable engineering guidance so you can actually build better products.
I'm passionate about innovation and optimization — not for their own sake, but because a well-optimized design performs better, costs less to run, and lasts longer. That's the outcome that matters.
From digital to physical
3D printing closes the gap between an idea and a real, tangible object. Combined with simulation, it becomes a tight feedback loop: model it, simulate it, print it, test it, refine it.
That cycle is where products get good. Good usage of this technology can genuinely change what people are able to build — and that's one of the things that makes this work genuinely exciting.
It started with a console for my sister
"If simulation and fabrication could do that for one person, it could do it for anyone."
The idea for all of this didn't come from a business plan. It came from a project: designing a custom console for my sister that brought together 3D scanning, 3D printing, and 3D modelling into one workflow.
Watching her use it — seeing how a piece of technology went from concept to something tangible and useful — that was the moment. That's the mission behind KWIKRAFT Engineering.
Got a project in mind?
Whether it's a CFD analysis or a 3D printing build, the conversation starts the same way.