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When it comes to 3Dprinting, there’s a lot of advice floating in the ether regarding best approaches to new projects. Well, 3Dprinting is 3Dprinting. Besides, calling a product “3Dprinted” is sexy. but, rather, stems from a manufacturing problem that requires a solution.
When you think of a hospital printing organ implants and creating custom joint replacements in a matter of hours, you might be picturing a scene decades from now. Thanks to 3Dprinting, that reality is only a handful of years away. This is just one example of the potential impact of 3Dprinting.
New innovative processes such as metal 3Dprinting — which reduces environmental impact by minimizing waste — are now available and commercially viable. With new approaches to design and digitalmanufacturing, businesses can seek dramatic improvements, rather than incremental savings.
Manufacturers’ Monthly speaks with CEO of Digital Metal Christian Lönne during his recent visit to Australia about the capabilities of the printer and the future of the additive manufacturing landscape. This is what ‘the next step’ looked like for Digital Metal. The acquisition fit both companies perfectly.
“I’m excited to be joining the already outstanding talents at Holo, providing our customers with dedicated support and helping fulfill the promise of digitalmanufacturing of metal parts.” This makes him a perfect fit for Holo. About Holo Holo enables digitalmanufacturing at scale.
We see great potential in enabling dentists to scan patients and then use the scan data to directly order restorative services or print-ready digital files from Desktop Labs that can be 3Dprinted in their offices.
Manufacturers’ Monthly speaks with CEO of Digital Metal Christian Lönne during his recent visit to Australia about the capabilities of the printer and the future of the additive manufacturing landscape. This is what ‘the next step’ looked like for Digital Metal. The acquisition fit both companies perfectly.
It can help manufacturers improve nearly any aspect of operations and supply chain in a way that’s unique to their needs. project is different, and there’s no one-size-fits-all approach, such projects can be difficult to plan and implement. At the same time, because every Industry 5.0 Industry 5.0 has many challenges.
The digitalmanufacturing and inspection workflow. Photo Credit: Shining 3D With the proportion of free-form surfaces increasing and the precision requirements for mold processing rising, manufacturing molds of high quality and securing the stability and quality during production has become vital. x 1 meters) (4.9
Robots also abounded in the Smartforce Student Summit, where they've become a major way to interest students in the manufacturing industry. One of the most interesting examples was the Astorino, a desktop sized 3Dprinted robot from Kawasaki that students can program using the same methods as industrial robots.
Now we have expanded our collaboration into metal AM and digitalmanufacturing applications that leverage ESAB’s fusion welding and consumable technologies. EWI can help them determine if the technology is a fit for their application without making a capital investment.”
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