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3 D Printing - This is mind blowing technology! - Must watch video!
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#2
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Oh yeh, this has been out there for years. Myself, as well as some friends, have used 3D printing services to have our models (designed in CG packages like Maya, Cinema4D, 3D Studio Max, etc.) printed in a resin material, which you can then sand down and paint, or assemble to create characters or prototypes or whatever.
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#4
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Whenever this comes up, I wonder how long it will be until you can print highly complex systems, like a computer, which has hundreds of different materials, although it would have to be able to print down to individual atoms/molecules for this to work. Even better if you could just put waste into a hopper and it disassembles it to get the required elements, making it the ultimate recycling machine (the dissembling could also be used separately).
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#5
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I recently read about a guy who has created a working automatic rifle, including printed bullets. Apparently it doesn't shoot properly all of the time, but that's probably a matter of refining the design.
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#6
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You just heard about this? They've been using this tech for years now to do stuff as mundane as printing out a figurine of your World of Warcraft character.
Also, is it just me, or does the dude with the wrench in that video totally sound like Al Franken? |
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#7
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How the hell they can scan and "print" a working wrench all in one piece with moving parts is beyond me. There are separate 4 pieces to an standard adjustable wrench like the ione they are copying.. I don't see how you can make a wrench all at once with the parts being separated from each other. I would think you'd have to scan and make the parts individually then put them together for them to work. Last edited by astro; 08-08-2012 at 12:37 AM. |
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#9
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My company actually sells 3D printers, including the exact brand used to print that girl's exoskeleton in fact. The 3D printers, as a relatively affordable technology, came out in 2004 or thereabouts, but we've been doing rapid prototyping/additive manufacturing since the company was founded in 1994. These include stereolithography, selective laser sintering, and fused deposition modeling, from which 3D printing is derived.
Last edited by Strainger; 08-08-2012 at 01:49 AM. Reason: Typos |
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#10
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It does seem to be getting more common and much more sophisticated though, instead of just being a "isn't that cool" curiosity.
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#11
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I think printing living hinges, springs and even clothes is also fascinating. If you follow Shapeways they'll update you on the latest technologies and materials (they had rubber for a time, I think they still do color sandstone). I'd try my hand at 3D printing, but Shapeways is too far away and the delivery costs are too high.
Also - didn't 3D printing use to use a liquid precursor and laser-curing system? I saw that on TV many many years ago. Now they seem to use powders. Last edited by AaronX; 08-08-2012 at 03:39 AM. |
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#12
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They use all sorts of things. There's even fairly successful research into 3D printing of living tissue. Bone, skin, organs, etc.
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#13
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So, if you're interest in 3D creations, apparently here is the self-publishing / amazon.com site for creating, selling and buying 3D objects: http://www.ponoko.com/
I'd love to get a home 3D printer kit, but so far they seem to be only able to make SMALL stuff. Once they hit the ability to make something 18x18, I'd love to get one to play with. |
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#14
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The powder-based 3D printers are cheaper and can use a wider variety of materials, since they're basically gluing together grains to make the desired shape. Usually they need an after-coat of glue to bond everything for proper strength once done. The big advantage of these is that the print head that sprays the binding agent onto the powder can also deposit ink at the same time, so you can print in any color. The really cheap machines coming on the market now use plastic filament, with a print head that melts the plastic and deposits it in a line to make the printed part. They're really cheap to own and operate, but slow and produce parts with blobs and grainy lines all over their surface. Still, useful for many purposes. We have one here at the office that has already paid for itself in building custom jigs and fixtures, and I'm building one for home use. |
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#15
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Here's a home printer that prints up to 8.9 x 5.7 x 5.9 inches. This is Soooo tempting, but as with all printers, it's the 'ink cartridges' that put you in the poor house.
http://store.makerbot.com/replicator-404.html |
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#16
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The printer I'm working on at home will have a print area that's approximately an 8 inch cube, which is about the largest you'll see in any hobby-grade machine. Larger than that and you start running into problems with the part warping as it cures and cools while still being printed. Avoiding that requires you to have the entire print chamber enclosed and temperature-controlled, and that gets expensive. |
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#17
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#18
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Selective Binding uses a head that sprays glue (and optionally ink) onto a powder of plastic (or ceramic, or many other materials) to selectively bind them. That's what's used to make full-color objects, or to make things from ceramic or other non-metal powders. |
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#19
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It looks like it could get pretty expensive pretty quickly; if I calculated correctly a solid 18x18x1 3D piece would start at just under $1700 to make. But if you really want to try out large-scale projects, it might be worth looking into. Also, kind of a tangent, but here's another approach to 3D fabrication that could become a reality in the near future: smart sand. This is really cool stuff! |
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#20
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This is such a bad thread for me! I'm rarely into toys... but I've been working on casting something in concrete and have been watching the videos on that site... I'm >this< close to buying the dual head printer.... If I were rich, the thing would have been bought about an hour ago!
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#21
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I remember a few years ago Wired magazine seemed to have a hard-on for personal (sometimes homemade) 3D printers, but the technology was basically just a nozzle that squirted out melted plastic. It seemed to me that for just a few thousand dollars and many hours of my time, I could be producing plastic army men that looked *almost* as good as the plastic army men you can buy a bag of in Toys R Us for 99 cents. Amazing! Let's just say I didn't share their enthusiasm. But the technology is really advancing by leaps and bounds, and it does seem like these machines will have a groundbreaking effect in the near future.
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#22
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Also, I have a desire for a 'clip' to hold some wood pieces at a specific angle. I'd been looking at how to put it together out of metal (e.g. welded pieces). That is overkill for the strength, but could fill the need. Now, I could buy a welder, learn how to use it, or contract this out. The project has stalled out over the decision. So, there are probably the geek squad types who just like the 'neat factor' of it. Then there are going to be artists who use it as a medium. Then there are people who see the ability to fabricate with materials that in the past were limited because you had to contract them out to specialized shops. |
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#23
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#24
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Stupid question: but I've always wondered why this process is called printing.
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#25
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#26
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I don't if it is exactly this, but it works something like the process of dot matrix printing. The early development of the software for the new systems would actually print the 2D layers of a 3D model until the mechanical device was perfected. In addition, a much earlier form of this process would create multiple layers printed on plastic or paper that were laminated together.
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#27
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Print quality in my experience has a lot more to do with the software you use and the rigidity of your Cartesian platform - the Makerbot Thing-O-Matic as shipped had terrible rigidity and needed a lot of modification before it printed well enough for me, although it does look like the Makerbot Replicator has fixed most of those design flaws. |
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#28
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Last edited by Hypno-Toad; 08-08-2012 at 01:15 PM. |
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#29
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Not long ago someone designed some models for use when playing Warhammer 40K. They weren't identical to any of the figurines already in the game, but were in the same style. In addition to printing them out, he uploaded the 3D files to the Thingiverse website. The publisher of WH40K promptly filed legal action and got the Thingiverse site to remove the files. Not that will stop this kind of thing - the Pirate Bay site already has a category listing for 3D object files. |
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#30
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Does anyone else see the implications of human copying, here? I could make a copy of myself to do everything while I sit at home playing video games all day! Well, or maybe we could split duties down the middle (since a copy of myself would also be as lazy as I am). Still, it'd be awesome to work part-time for full-time wages. All I'd have to worry about is feeding my other self! Well, that and the risk she'd clock me and assume my life for her own.
![]() Also, maybe someday we can print out and implant a good kidney for people in renal failure!
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#31
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I don't think that linked video is accurate. They show them scanning the wrench and then printing it. I don't think it would be possible to have a functioning wrench just from scanning it. The scan wouldn't be able to tell how the sliding mechanism works. A scan-to-print process would produce a solid replica of the original item, but wouldn't be able to reproduce the moving parts.
Likely they printed a wrench from a CAD drawing they have where the components are individually modeled. Regardless, still it's pretty impressive. |
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#32
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The powder based, as someone else mentioned is known as selective laser sintering (SLS) (video; she's pretty easy on the eyes). This is where a laser fuses layers of powder together to form the complete part. Since it's a solid powder, it's self supporting, meaning you can generate assemblies without additional temporary support structure. Also, the material's pretty strong, so you can use it in lab tests much more easily than with weaker materials. It does have a rough, powdery texture though. I've found that the world seems hellbent on refering to all types of additive manufacturing as "3D printing" whereas at my company we just refer to 3D printing as the cheaper spin-off of fused deposition modeling (FDM). FDM (video) works by extruding melted plastic through a nozzle to build the part layer by layer. Whereas the FDM machines are pretty expensive, the 3D printers (just cheaper versions of FDM machines, essentially) are relatively inexpensive. All the different types of rapid prototying/additive manufacturing are used pretty regularly, depending on the customers' needs. No technology has replaced the other at this point. They all have their advantages and disadvantages. |
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#33
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I see a revolutionary technology, fortunes made and fortunes lost, and a chance to finally get a life size model of my skull.
__________________
Nothing is impossible if you can imagine it. That's the wonder of being a scientist! Prof Hubert Farnsworth, Futurama |
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#34
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What is so cool about 3D printing is that it has brought industrialization full circle. We have gone from industrialization that created a mass produced world filled with identical and disposable crap to a world in which each of us will have to power to hand craft unique individual items. I predict that as with most technological revolutions, this one will be used to produce porn.
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#35
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I'd always thought the ideal first application of this technology was custom dildo manufacture.
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#36
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;" they're working on it.
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#37
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#39
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But I suspect that they did have to disassemble the original wrench to be able to scan all the parts accurately. Otherwise, the scanning process would have had to been able to scan through the frame of the wrench to find the shape of the hidden part of the moveable jaw. |
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#40
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SPOILER:
I had no idea we were already doing research into printing living tissue. |
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#41
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Fun fact: The guy in the blue shirt in the video is the same guy whose house was remodeled by This Old House last year (the really old 1700s house that got a marble counter top with a cut out for a compost bin!).
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