Remove 2014 Remove 3D printing Remove Supply Chain
article thumbnail

Celebrating a decade of additive manufacturing excellence

Manufacturer's Monthly

Markforged has been at the forefront of additive manufacturing for the past 10 years, helping manufacturers revolutionise the industrial production landscape by bringing 3D printing right to the factory floor. A year later, the company launched Eiger, its cloud- based 3D printing software.

article thumbnail

A vision of manufacturing resilience and flexibility

Manufacturer's Monthly

Many years later, Terem is leading Markforged to create high-value, end- use manufacturing applications which are printed at the point of need to solve today’s supply chain challenges – a feat which surely ties back to making a difference to real-world problems.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

TURN UP: Larger, Lighter Additive Parts

Additive Manufacturing

The program is integrating, demonstrating, and validating technologies capable of reducing CO 2 emissions as well as nitrous oxide (NOx) and noise emissions by up to 30% compared to 2014 “state-of-the-art” aircraft. Another goal is to develop a strong and globally competitive aeronautical industry and supply chain in Europe.

article thumbnail

Made in the USA - Season 2 Episode 1: A Return From China

Modern Machine Shop

When we launched this show a couple of years ago, we focused on the key topics that drive our conversations about US manufacturing, the 2000s era collapse of our manufacturing workforce, controversy surrounding automation, supply chain problems that COVID-19 put in the spotlight. So starting in the Eevee space, started about 2014.

article thumbnail

Copper Alloys Find an Ideal Niche in Metal AM

Fabricating & Metal Work

In its pure form copper is relatively soft; for the more advanced 3D-printing purposes it’s usually mixed with other metals into alloys that provide enhanced mechanical properties along with that valuable conductivity. Starting in 2014, NASA began developing GRCop-84 for printing rocket combustion chambers.