The video shows a functional crescent wrench. This is clearly HP's answer to Z Corp's popular video.
The video mentions a price of €12,500 ($16,500?), and it looks like 2 units - 1 to print items and 1 to clean off excess material added in the first step. The first is the size of a college fridge, the other is as big as a laser printer.
it looks more like an acid bath for dissolving the support material. It printed out with a white support structure, and in the end they list the volume of support material used for the structure.
This wrench has been a standard industry demo part for like 15 years, but by "functional" you mean it open/closes - not so much can actually be used to turn bolts. That's really the holy grail of 3DP - to actually be able to use things you print in real applications - beyond visual prototypes.
Exactly! The material need's to get better, but soon instead of having storages of spare parts we cab just keep a digital record, and print up whatever part you'd need. Soon we could have a small store that sells any car part ever made.
Your kid wants the latest toy- download the design and print. Christmas retail supply issues sorted.
Hopefully in the future, the basic 3d printer will go beyond plastics and allow printing from some hardier durable material (nanotubes maybe), then you'll be able to pretty much download a design and print anything.
* Kitchen utensils - I'm sure there's tons of things at Bed Bath and Beyond that could be made by current or slightly larger 3D printers.
* Desktop goodies/organization - paper inbox, laptop stand, pencil holders, phone docks, etc. If the material is strong enough (and the printers are big enough), I'd love to be able to print a cool lcd monitor swivel/stand (something like the ergotron.com products).
I specially liked the idea of printing food. Not the glorious goal of ending world hunger(still need the ingredients right?) - but the fact that I won't have to drag my ass to kitchen. Write a cron job, that'll download recipe and print food!
Think of situations where there are lots of varieties in the two interface points,creating enough combinations to make production of all of them economically infeasible. You can combine two "ends" and print a custom part.
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[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 52.8 ms ] threadThe video mentions a price of €12,500 ($16,500?), and it looks like 2 units - 1 to print items and 1 to clean off excess material added in the first step. The first is the size of a college fridge, the other is as big as a laser printer.
(Just guessing, sorry I can't read German)
http://www.uprint3dprinting.com/3d-printers/3d-printer-wavew...
Hopefully in the future, the basic 3d printer will go beyond plastics and allow printing from some hardier durable material (nanotubes maybe), then you'll be able to pretty much download a design and print anything.
* Desktop goodies/organization - paper inbox, laptop stand, pencil holders, phone docks, etc. If the material is strong enough (and the printers are big enough), I'd love to be able to print a cool lcd monitor swivel/stand (something like the ergotron.com products).
I specially liked the idea of printing food. Not the glorious goal of ending world hunger(still need the ingredients right?) - but the fact that I won't have to drag my ass to kitchen. Write a cron job, that'll download recipe and print food!
Think of situations where there are lots of varieties in the two interface points,creating enough combinations to make production of all of them economically infeasible. You can combine two "ends" and print a custom part.
http://h10088.www1.hp.com/cda/gap/display/main/index.jsp?zn=...
http://www.uprint3dprinting.com/
Also, who did the marketing video for this? Need to add them to my rolodex