Savage Canopy Fitting
A broken canopy fitting shouldn't sideline otherwise good Savage equipment, and with a decent sample to work from it usually doesn't have to. We've made this style of part before and can usually print yours without drama.

A broken canopy fitting shouldn't sideline otherwise good Savage equipment, and with a decent sample to work from it usually doesn't have to. We've made this style of part before and can usually print yours without drama.
Why these break
Bimini and canopy fittings snap at the knuckle. UV exposure breaks down the polymer chains in the original material. By the time the surface looks chalky or faded, the strength underneath is already gone.
How we reproduce them
Bring in the broken part and we'll reverse engineer it — usually with a design tweak that addresses why it failed in the first place, not just a copy of the weak original.
We print these in PA-CF. Carbon-fibre nylon is the strongest material we run — it goes into parts that carry real load, where a lesser plastic would be the next thing to break.
As with everything in our library: whether a part can be reproduced depends on size, load, heat, material, and having a decent sample to work from. Send photos first — the assessment costs you nothing, and we'll tell you honestly if a genuine spare is the better option.
Part details
| Manufacturer | Savage |
|---|---|
| Vehicle / equipment type | Boat / outboard |
| Common failure mode | Bimini and canopy fittings snap at the knuckle |
| Typical use case | Direct replacement for the original canopy fitting on the Savage. |
Printing & reverse engineering
| Can print directly | Yes |
|---|---|
| Can scan from broken sample | Yes |
| Can redesign / improve | Yes |
| Recommended material | PA-CF |
| Alternative materials | ASA |
| Print technology | FDM |
| Difficulty | Medium |
| Estimated print time | 1–3 hours |
| Estimated cost range | $18 – $40 |
| Expected lifespan | 5+ years |
| Outdoor suitable | Yes |
| Heat resistant | No |
| Load bearing | Depends |
| Requires post-processing | No |
Ask us about this part
Many plastic parts can be recreated, repaired, redesigned, or printed, depending on size, load, heat, material, and available samples.
