Time, the next dimension of printing.4D printing
That’s the great thing about 3D printing! We sell all these parts for the Autohelm wheel pilot. The moment you order, we throw it on the printer. Just in time printing!Time, the next dimension of printing.![]()
Exactly. Designing the parts is a small part of the cost of running a business. And, it’s a misconception that parts can be scanned effectively. That just isn’t feasible and won’t see interior features like screw holes and cavities. As well as the previous post I made about injection moulding and 3D printing having entirely different constraints and limitations.You need to recover your modeling time, equipment replacement, software and maintence, computers, training, marketing.... —- not to mention the cost of the plastic - it’s not cheap if viewed as business.
A spool of plastic is $20-$60 and can make lots of pilot to wheel clamps.
Yes, there are many types of filaments that are UV stable. I was on a boat last week of a customer who installed one of our levers on an ST3000 3 years ago - and it's still absolutely fine. Been in the sun, rain, and salt with absolutely no degradation. Choosing the right plastic for the particular part is very important.Is spooled strand available in uv stable formulations now? The off the shelf stuff probably won't last three years.
Have you use ASA for UV resistant outdoor applications? I don't have any experience with it but I hear it is holds up well to the environment.It depends on which part it is and what it's material requirements are from an engineering point of view. First and foremost, UV is important for any part exposed to the sun on a sailboat - so those types of parts, levers, brackets etc, are printed in strong UV resistant material. For levers, we obviously want to use a plastic with a high tensile strength. For interior parts, like the interior rollers on the Autohelm 4000, UV isn't a problem, but wear is, so we use a wear resistant, hard plastic - tensile strength isn't a concern. For tiny gears inside planetary drives, speed and wear is the concern, so nylon is the obvious choice. For electronic enclosures on the remote controls we make, we use ABS. So, it varies depending on the requirements of the part. And FDM isn't suitable for all parts - for tiny gears we have to use SLS - selective laser sintering printers. For stainless steel parts - we send out for DMP - direct metal printing. Only Jay Leno can afford to have his very own DMP printer for metal parts for his car restoration hobby!
Well, there you have it. Next, 3D printed concrete hulls. Or even, 3D printed fiberglass boats. Yep, I see a future in 3D printed boats.Marines print concrete barracks in 40 hours. Oorah!
http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2018/08/29/marines-3d-print-concrete-barracks-in-just-40-hours.html
I can see making hull molds with 3D printers, with finishing by band/machine.Well, there you have it. Next, 3D printed concrete hulls. Or even, 3D printed fiberglass boats. Yep, I see a future in 3D printed boats.
Not so far fetched at all @LeslieTroyer. I think it is being done already to some extent. Some of the parts we print, where we want extreme tensile strength, we print using carbon fibre reinforced plastic. We also are experimenting with fibre glass reinforced polypropylene plastic. After printing, these parts can be annealed in an oven to raise the strength another level.I can see making hull molds with 3D printers, with finishing by band/machine.
- I think boats >20’ are quite a ways out.
Les