
Sorry could'nt resist saying, tommorrow is play day
Steve
These things are far from toys, the high end models are turning out products that are both accurate and complex, true they would be expensive to use in a production situation but then you wouldn't employ a 3D printer if you were knocking out hundreds of items. That never was their purpose but if you are making a low number of units of anything they can't be beat for cost and if you see what they are capable of in complexity of shapes, I'm not sure even conventional plastic molding could effectively replicate without costs running into the 5 or 6 figure range.simonm wrote:Hmm...
As a toy I can see it would be fun. For prototyping I can see uses but on the whole I can't really figure out what they are good for. I am assuming that you are limited to just one kind of plastic when you use one of these.
What's the point of that when it's only going to melt eventually and ruin most the best bits.Tod Gilding wrote:Found Another Use for it Steve
http://news.ninemsn.com.au/technology/2 ... 3d-printer
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