Markforged, a 3D printer company founded by MIT aerospace engineer Greg Mark, has raised the bar on this technology by producing printers that produce chopped carbon fiber-filled plastics(called their Onyx process), printers that produce continuous carbon fiber-filled plastics, and is now going for metal printing with what they describe as their Atomic Diffusion Additive Manufacturing, or ADAM process. It's a metal powder-filled plastic fiber similar to the chopped carbon fiber approach:
Greg Mark unveiled the company’s Metal X desktop printer , which, once it becomes available in September, will print in a variety of metals including 17-4 stainless steel, 303 stainless steel, 6061 aluminum, 7075 aluminum, A-2 tool steel, D-2 tool steel, IN alloy (Inconel) 625 and titanium Ti-6Al-4V. The printer speeds up production with rapid sintering using a microwave furnace, a process that becomes highly reliable when the printer is following consistent instructions. Designs are printed in metal powder surrounded by plastic, the plastic is dissolved and the metal is sintered, leaving behind a strong metal part.The link in that description is a short overview; a better overview video is here.
In the first, shorter, video, Greg Mark says, “If you can afford a half million or million dollar metal printer - buy one. This is for the rest of us”. Further reading will show you that the Metal-X printer will be just under $100,000. That doesn't include the cost of the “microwave furnace” to sinter the parts and I have no data on what that will cost, but I'd be confident predicting it's significant. Definitely not my idea of something for the home market, but something corporations might be interested in. The hope of metal additive manufacturing (3D printing) is that it will lower the cost of manufacturing, but it's still out of the class of the machining (or subtractive manufacturing) infrastructure that has been the backbone of industry since the industrial revolution. Let me gloss over the differences and relative strengths vs. weaknesses between additive and subtractive manufacturing to just point at price. For quite a bit less than $30,000, a company can buy a very capable subtractive manufacturing station (Haas CNC Milling machine). I've heard numbers suggesting a fully tricked out machining center is in the range of $50,000. On the other hand, if the work envelope and rest of the work flow supports it, a rather competent Tormach machine can be had for under $10,000.
Design News points out:
Few manufacturers are discussing replacing traditional production methods for parts with AM techniques, as it would simply be too expensive. For plastics 3D printing will probably never beat the speed and volume capacity of injection molding. (However, using AM to create the molds will lead to more rapid product innovation with plastics by eliminating the single biggest bottleneck in the injection molding process.)There are thousands of small contract machine shops that will produce a company's designs for them to compete with these printer farms. I think the only way the printer farm vision gets a foothold is doing the techniques that Additive manufacturing does better than subtractive. Manufacturing and machining in general just keeps getting better. The 1/3 to 1/10 reduction in price to go with a more conventional machining center instead of metal AM is a very big disadvantage for the metal printers to overcome. It might encourage designers to redesign parts to take advantage of the cheaper machining process rather than go to the more expensive metal printers.
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Earlier this year, CEO Greg Mark told the audience at CES that the future of metal 3D printing is in print farms. The Metal X printer was created as an affordable ($99,500 is the current price tag) standalone shop printer, but the company sees a vision of fleets of these printers operating in tandem.
“Our Metal X printer is the first step in this direction,” (Marketing VP Cynthia) Gumbert told Design News. “It’s not in the same category of the large-format metal printers that form a high-end, expensive niche that only larger manufacturers can afford. Parallelization is the key to scaling volume, rather than a different, faster type of print process. We’ve always been about getting a near-final or finished piece right off the printer that can be sintered with very little post-processing, and ADAM is generating extremely high-quality parts.”
The one place this could work would be in parts and repair parts for aircraft. Having worked in the structures department as a mechanic and lead mechanic it is generally far cheaper to fabricate a part using the manufactures data than to buy the part from the manufacturer and the other thing driving the cost is the time required to make the part vs the time to get delivery of the part. Time is the driving factor...an aircraft sitting on the ground can cost 10,000.00 bucks a day. The problem with using printers would be the FAA accepting the process and that is like pulling alligator teeth without putting the gator under. Perhaps in some future year it might be possible but where I see the most cost savings area is pretty well in abled by government. Just using composites drove companies into bankruptcy and other to refuse to cross that line ever again. indyjonesouthere
ReplyDeleteBusiness wisdom is the whole market switches over when the competition finally shrinks the price by 90%. This is about to happen for higher education. Wonder what the percentage number is for politics? Early America army succeeded against the British army with an ocean, better tactics, better rifles, and far less wealth. Credit mostly to the ocean. Look at the technological singularity historical plot. Delivery of the results of technological innovation to the masses can be banned for awhile, but the pressure builds and then results suddenly pop up to the trend line. Sooner or later somebody is going to 3D print cruise missile and rocket parts, and not care what the FAA, NASA, BATF, Cheyenne Mountain, or any other conservative gun control group thinks.
DeleteAnd then there's this:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vPv7PwS50OE
I gotta tell you that when I saw it was 24 minutes long on the timer, I figured there's no way I'm going to watch that, but I did.
DeleteVery cool.
It would have been even cooler if they had shown production of any of those parts!
DeleteThere was a kickstarter for filament to do that, they were funded but failed at delivery. https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1093108121/sinterhard-metal-filled-filaments-for-3d-printing
ReplyDelete-Joat
That's very interesting input! Any other info you could point to would be cool. Are they following up with more attempts or did they just give up?
DeleteAll I have is the information on the kickstarter, I ran into this today also https://www.filabot.com/blogs/news/filamentfriday-virtual-foundry-copper-filamet-1 you can buy copper sinterable filament now.
DeleteMy work is buying a Markforged fiber printer, and when the sales guys were in they had a sample printed metal part, the quality was impressive.
-Joat