Tech Xplore on MSN
Ultrafast 3D printing method creates complex objects in under a second
High-speed 3D printing has just gotten a lot faster. Researchers from Tsinghua University in China have developed a new high-speed printing technology capable of creating complex millimeter-scale ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
China shatters 3D printing speed record, fabricates objects in just 0.6 seconds
In recent years, 3D printing has advanced rapidly. However, the technology has been trapped ...
Speed in 3D printing hasn’t been super important to everyone. Certainly, users value speed. But some value quality even more highly, and if gaining quality means giving up speed, then so be it. That’s ...
Comics Gaming Magazine on MSN
Prusa Core One L 3D printer review
The Prusa Core One L delivers the kind of large-format reliability that most printers promise but very few actually achieve.
A research team from Tsinghua University has demonstrated an ultra-fast volumetric 3D-printing method that produces complex ...
DISH 3D printing enables millimeter-scale objects in 0.6 seconds using holographic light fields for record speed and precision.
Creality continues its mark of excellence in the Ender series with the Ender-3 V3 Plus. This high-speed 3D printer builds upon the success of its predecessors, from the entry-level Ender-3 V3 SE to ...
The majority of consumer FDM 3D printers print at a snail's pace that even a basic model might take hours to complete. But things will be different in 2022 when a high-speed 3D printing device hits ...
Achieving good quality 3D prints always came at the cost of speed, which used to be OK, because a 14-hour print job was better than the days it would take and the sums of money it would cost to get ...
Formlabs is back with updated versions of its popular Form 3 and Form 3B SLA 3D printers. The new Form 3+ and Form 3B+ promise key enhancements — of particular note, faster printing speeds — made ...
Industry estimates 3D-printing construction can reduce labor needs between 60% and 80% because many repetitive tasks disappear. What’s more, printing directly ...
Harvard researchers have developed a 3D-printing method that could make it easier to build soft robots designed to bend, deform and grip in predictable ways.
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