I LOVE the essentium machine and really cool to see the company develop. The shade thrown "we don't charge you extra to print PEKK" I know exactly who he's talking about and it's amazing that they're challenging them with a machine at that price point!
Not to mention, you can tell the man KNOWS every detail and is EXTREMELY knowledgeable rather than just sticking to talking points that many seem to do.
That first guy knows how to make a sale. He's not selling proprietary garbage, he's selling The Machine. Very cool 'tool' also, granted I don't have space for it, but man look what you could do with it vs industrial machines where you'd need a full shop of tools and craftsman to do the same thing. If you're a budding aerospace contractor with limited manpower but high skills, this would be a great way to land contracts for the big boys. Edit: Scratch that, all these guys have amazing products with great user pathways that actually improve upon the established quotient. That is what we need; better prints quicker than what you can produce with traditional means.
Mark from SAM has to be one of the most honest and genuine reps I've seen interviewed. The integrity he radiates would certainly make for an easier decision to support that company.
The Essentium ESD and cleanroom safe prints are really interesting. We spend time and money machining trays and fixtures for cleanroom equipment and processes that need to be customized for every product we build. Depending on the tolerances (or maybe with some selective machining) and range of ESD-safe materials, this might be able to speed up some of our development cycles.
Joel, you are the man for this job, because you know what questions to ask! Hi 5 ✋🏻 This just really gets me so excited for the future, to see, perhaps for the first time, a point of difference, where 3D printing may actually create a cheaper product than past mass production could do. And next year 3D robotics are going to the moon already! Out of this world 🤯 (I'll see myself out: Sorry. Couldn't resist)
"So you have a leaf blower on the machine". "Pretty much, yeah. We just don't have a pull start on it". Needing out with tech talk, while maintaining a sense of humor. FTW!
WOW the Essentium machine is amazing and at a reasonable price considering their target market. Thanks for the video. Always nice to see what the big boys play with 😲😲
That Thermwood needs to get into the comsumer/civilian market! It'd be really cool to have a hulking desktop printer like that, & the pellet & glue system seems like it works really well although ABS is going out of style
There is one single thing, that is more impressive than all the things they print with these machine, its the minds behind them, that made them work, make them do things no other had thought of before, that my good people, is the amazing thing about inventions!
Joe you're having alot of fun out there. I can't get enough of your show. You got into this and now i am 4 printers in, an additive manufacturing specialization, and working on working on a second additive specialization so thank you sir.
Speaking of monster 3D printers, im working on a project called monster delta, me and my team are working on a delta like youve never seen. Might send one your way when its done ;)
I was there Monday and Tuesday. Crazy show. Should've done a segment on the resin printer that can print a 1mm dia gear with a hole in it. The visible quality under the microscope was astounding.
2022 is gonna be interesting, some quite significant 3D Systems patents expire next year. And no. Patents are _not_ cool in this space, and especially not by these companies. They're the ones that have consistently held 3d printing back 20 years.
As an Arcimoto shareholder, it's awesome to see the FUV getting attention anywhere, but when it involves my favorite hobby of 3D printing I'm even more pleased. It's great to see the improvements they have made, and I really hope this is included in production at the new factory, and they are able to scale this up to the 50,000 units a year volume required for mass manufacture. It's so cool seeing how 3D printing is helping improve the usability of Electric Vehicles going forward. It was also fun seeing that stool take the "Full Joel" Like A Boss. I hope they share that file at some point. It would be nice in smaller scale as a pot plant stand. Seems really solid. I reckon I could probably make a decent copy of it though if they don't wanna share. LOL.
@@3DPrintingNerd You're going to love it. See if they will let you ride the new secret mini tilt scooter (well that's what I suspect they've built). Just remember, with any EV, go slow and work up to fast. You don't want to do what Elon Musk did, and goose the throttle and crash it. Have fun, and thanks for all the great video's over the last 5 years or more I've been watching.
I don't know how I did it but I recognized Avi of Nexa3D from when he was advertising the Cube printer for 3D systems. I remember how confident Avi was about that machine which by the time I saw the video had been failing on the market for a good year or two already. These are the guys that make it reguardless of whether a company does or not.
What a great show that was. Can't wait for the next video from the show. Love seeing what the industry can do when you have more money to spend. So cool ! Thank you for sharing with us.
Man, whatever happened to fifth axis printing? It was really big a few years ago and now nothing. I was hoping it'd start to filter down to home machines by now, but instead it disappeared. weird...
There are a couple of prosumer grade printers out there with fifth axis and customized Cura algorithms, but they're a few thousand each and even the ones where the rotational axes are on the tool carriage have small build volume.
Had a chance to finally sit down and watch the 3 series of videos on TCT. Thanks for the coverage Joel! I am super interested in non-marring ESD materials! Modeling with ESD in mind is difficult as it limits material choices.
I think the test on industrial additive manufacturing should be the Naomi Wu test. Like the Turing test, but in making the closest to human copy of Real Sexy Cyborg. That way we know we are at least half way there in making a non sexy human copy....
You should print a tree fort that looks like a tree or maybe a spaceship, or a plastic boxable home that is amphibious next. I can get you a great deal on star trek shirts.
For anyone else wondering, @2:15 he says "thousand-pound gaylords". At first I thought this was some kind of rude, crass joke, but actually a "gaylord" is an industry term for a giant, pallet-sized box. They are often used to store bulk raw materials like pellets and resins. Who knew?
This is very cool, some new cutting edge technology, always a joy to watch. That stool they made is very nice. But printing it in solid will could cost a couple of hundred for material don't you think? So it is nice, but not really super viable as a business i guess. But still cool!
I just wish the advanced high temperature polymers would get cheaper to the point it isn't the machine limiting their usage, I even thought of getting a high temperature hot end and bed but.... damn don't think I would spend hundreds of dollars on a one kilo spool, tho I bet they only tend to get cheaper with time as well. You guys that have been printing for way longer than me probably can tell the evolution in PETG pricing and such.
is it just an impression or most of the machines in this video do not have the nozzle fan? as the man at essentium said, to have stronger bond (as for nylon) you turn off the fan. what is your experience?
UV chambers, wouldn't be too expensive to make I guess?? Right??? Maybe?? :) And that 179K for the essentium is actually really cheap! I mean, million dollar machines are normal in businesses. Very nice.
@@3DPrintingNerd Cool! thanks! I was just thinking that they had said how fast it was printing some specific parts, but I was kind of thinking of an apples to apples comparison.
I'd enjoy this if my workshop wasn't destroyed in a b&e. Sorry Joel. I may have to unjoin the chan to save up money. Music and technology are my passion and 90 percent of what I have accumulated is gone. At least they left me an old Jackson guitar that I'm restoring, a 5 string bass that was by pure chance in a different room at the time and broke everything with a display ot was in a shelf. Didn't touch my printers though as I'm sure they didn't know what they were. In their excitement broke my ps5 and left it. It's just stuff though ehh. Insurance doesn't cover the prs guitar I bought when I could finally afford a guitar worth more than a few hundred or the passion for making by teaching myself to code again led to as a way of dealing with mental illness ... sorry. It's not anyone but my problem. None of it is covered either because I didn't report it to police within a reasonable time apparently. I was 37 before I could afford a decent guitar, 23 years after I began playing.
@@3DPrintingNerd no worries man. You didn't do it but I appreciate it. I know who did and they couldn't help it. Long story brother, I have it all back but it's all in pieces so I salvaged some ram and an old gpu plus some other stuff but the rest is e-waste, splintered wood and garbage now. Can't press charges on cancer if it kills someone so. Cryptic, I know and I'm sorry but I'm more hurt by sentimental value loss than money to replace. I'm not making any sense. Sorry, I had to vent. Thanks for the kind words, you're a real person.
These companies seriously need to stop misusing buzzwords like "utility." There is absolutely nothing utilitarian about that "FUV." It's got about as much utility as my motorcycle.
Well, let’s see…. Three wheels, so more stable than a motorcycle. Frame, so more protection from other vehicles. Frame, so more protection from the elements. These are being touted as delivery vehicles, and for First Responders. They have utility… Maybe not for YOU, but many folks will find them utile….
@@ernestgalvan9037 mhm but doesn't every vehicle fundamentally have utility? It has some method of propulsion and can carry someone or something. Otherwise, it would be a sculpture. So a buzzword that doesn't even mean anything.
I LOVE the essentium machine and really cool to see the company develop. The shade thrown "we don't charge you extra to print PEKK" I know exactly who he's talking about and it's amazing that they're challenging them with a machine at that price point!
Right?? Some neat things going on here.
Talking about Stratasys?
yeah that machine is amazing, i'd really love to see more about that shear extrusion he was talking about
Not to mention, you can tell the man KNOWS every detail and is EXTREMELY knowledgeable rather than just sticking to talking points that many seem to do.
The person I spoke to at the Essentium booth is one of the inventors :)
That first guy knows how to make a sale. He's not selling proprietary garbage, he's selling The Machine. Very cool 'tool' also, granted I don't have space for it, but man look what you could do with it vs industrial machines where you'd need a full shop of tools and craftsman to do the same thing. If you're a budding aerospace contractor with limited manpower but high skills, this would be a great way to land contracts for the big boys.
Edit: Scratch that, all these guys have amazing products with great user pathways that actually improve upon the established quotient. That is what we need; better prints quicker than what you can produce with traditional means.
Smashing the layer for maximum layer adhesion is an interesting idea.
These are some amazing 3D Printers.
we NEED more essentium! what a beatiful peek prints and amazing technology, we really need more
Oh you will be getting more!
Mark from SAM has to be one of the most honest and genuine reps I've seen interviewed. The integrity he radiates would certainly make for an easier decision to support that company.
That was fun to watch. Thanks Joel. Looking forward to more.
The Essentium ESD and cleanroom safe prints are really interesting. We spend time and money machining trays and fixtures for cleanroom equipment and processes that need to be customized for every product we build. Depending on the tolerances (or maybe with some selective machining) and range of ESD-safe materials, this might be able to speed up some of our development cycles.
Joel, you are the man for this job, because you know what questions to ask! Hi 5 ✋🏻
This just really gets me so excited for the future, to see, perhaps for the first time, a point of difference, where 3D printing may actually create a cheaper product than past mass production could do. And next year 3D robotics are going to the moon already!
Out of this world 🤯 (I'll see myself out: Sorry. Couldn't resist)
"So you have a leaf blower on the machine".
"Pretty much, yeah. We just don't have a pull start on it".
Needing out with tech talk, while maintaining a sense of humor. FTW!
Glad we could have you there! Great first episode!
WOW the Essentium machine is amazing and at a reasonable price considering their target market.
Thanks for the video. Always nice to see what the big boys play with 😲😲
That Thermwood needs to get into the comsumer/civilian market! It'd be really cool to have a hulking desktop printer like that, & the pellet & glue system seems like it works really well although ABS is going out of style
There is one single thing, that is more impressive than all the things they print with these machine, its the minds behind them, that made them work, make them do things no other had thought of before, that my good people, is the amazing thing about inventions!
the Essentium machine is basically the equivalent of a highly automated process plant. Thats alot of R&D to advance the industry to this level.
That’s the truth
Joe you're having alot of fun out there. I can't get enough of your show. You got into this and now i am 4 printers in, an additive manufacturing specialization, and working on working on a second additive specialization so thank you sir.
Speaking of monster 3D printers, im working on a project called monster delta, me and my team are working on a delta like youve never seen.
Might send one your way when its done ;)
14:36 Hozzle? 🤣
Great stuff! I can not wait for the next episode. Joel you are truly an amazing interviewer.
For someone who knows nothing about all of this, this was really interesting and peaked my interest thanks dude
I was there Monday and Tuesday. Crazy show. Should've done a segment on the resin printer that can print a 1mm dia gear with a hole in it. The visible quality under the microscope was astounding.
Awesome video. Amazing seeing all that high tech stuff. Thanks 3PN.
Awsome. I want to print a garage... And use it for VR sculpting
My tire had a de-lamination, on the way to work today.... I had to pull over, and 3d print a new one.
2022 is gonna be interesting, some quite significant 3D Systems patents expire next year.
And no. Patents are _not_ cool in this space, and especially not by these companies. They're the ones that have consistently held 3d printing back 20 years.
Oh, so, that's where Avi wound up. (He used to be the CEO of 3D Systems.)
Very nice interviews, as always!
Nice job very informative👌
never heard of shear-thinning ... pretty interesting stuff :)
It's common for molten polymers, as far as I'm concerned. Paints are usually shear thinning as well.
Ketchup is shear thinning (thixotropic) for a more relatable example. Non drip paint would be another.
@@Durkan34 You're right, ketchup is also shear thinning, but I'm not sure it is thixotropic... Now I'm curious, I'll check that with some colleagues.
As an Arcimoto shareholder, it's awesome to see the FUV getting attention anywhere, but when it involves my favorite hobby of 3D printing I'm even more pleased. It's great to see the improvements they have made, and I really hope this is included in production at the new factory, and they are able to scale this up to the 50,000 units a year volume required for mass manufacture. It's so cool seeing how 3D printing is helping improve the usability of Electric Vehicles going forward.
It was also fun seeing that stool take the "Full Joel" Like A Boss. I hope they share that file at some point. It would be nice in smaller scale as a pot plant stand. Seems really solid. I reckon I could probably make a decent copy of it though if they don't wanna share. LOL.
I really cannot wait to get to Ventura and take the FUV for a spin.
@@3DPrintingNerd You're going to love it. See if they will let you ride the new secret mini tilt scooter (well that's what I suspect they've built). Just remember, with any EV, go slow and work up to fast. You don't want to do what Elon Musk did, and goose the throttle and crash it. Have fun, and thanks for all the great video's over the last 5 years or more I've been watching.
I don't know how I did it but I recognized Avi of Nexa3D from when he was advertising the Cube printer for 3D systems. I remember how confident Avi was about that machine which by the time I saw the video had been failing on the market for a good year or two already. These are the guys that make it reguardless of whether a company does or not.
What a great show that was. Can't wait for the next video from the show. Love seeing what the industry can do when you have more money to spend. So cool ! Thank you for sharing with us.
Joel thought he broke that one part at Essentium. Lol the look on his face. 😯😁 Very Cool technology. Look forward to seeing more!
I don’t own a 3D printer, I never operated one and I know nothing about it. And I still enjoyed the hell out of this episode! 😊
This was great!!!!!!!!
what a great video
I would like to be the first to file a complaint that this video has expensive printers in it and I’m upset that I can not afford them.
…afford them yet. 😉
This is awesome, wanted to go there for my job, bummed I missed out, hoping to be there next year and say hi! Thanks Joel for a great vid.
That was awesome and thank you for sharing
The roller for the large printer also looks like it is running chilled water through instead of running part cooling fans
Man, whatever happened to fifth axis printing? It was really big a few years ago and now nothing.
I was hoping it'd start to filter down to home machines by now, but instead it disappeared. weird...
There are a couple of prosumer grade printers out there with fifth axis and customized Cura algorithms, but they're a few thousand each and even the ones where the rotational axes are on the tool carriage have small build volume.
14:36 Joel, what's a "hozzle"? Is that a proprietary high-temp nozzle?
Excellent we need more of this.
Had a chance to finally sit down and watch the 3 series of videos on TCT. Thanks for the coverage Joel! I am super interested in non-marring ESD materials! Modeling with ESD in mind is difficult as it limits material choices.
Thanks for watching! As for that material - crazy cool isn’t it?
I just bought 7 star trek shirts, and now feel obligated to print up a matching spaceship from recycled plastic deck chairs.
I think the test on industrial additive manufacturing should be the Naomi Wu test. Like the Turing test, but in making the closest to human copy of Real Sexy Cyborg. That way we know we are at least half way there in making a non sexy human copy....
Excellent coverage!
@13:00 ...so much ultem/peek/pekk on the table, wonder what it's worth
For them that sell the material, not nearly as much (as I assume they would buy pellets) but still, a lot indeed.
i am surprised Drew Carry is so knowledgeable about 3d printers.
Definitely do a video on the MUV. Would be good fodder for the other channel, but I'll watch it on either.
Valeu!
I think I'd have found it hard to keep a straight face around the 2:14 mark. Well done Joel.
I had never heard of shear thinning.
Thanks to you, Joel, I learned a thing or two today that I didn't know.
Ooh, you're welcome! What were the things you learned?
@@3DPrintingNerd About PEEK and PEKK. I've never heard of them. Also about these companies. Greetings from Argentina.
You should print a tree fort that looks like a tree or maybe a spaceship, or a plastic boxable home that is amphibious next.
I can get you a great deal on star trek shirts.
the first guy: making space stuffs..
the third guy: the firt printer on the moon..
Me: 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Fired up!! (Joel... too) lol
25:44 I would give anything to see that stool stress tested. SOLID ABS?
Really cool stuff
@14:12
Holy cow!!!
I need to print that chair
If I would have known you were in Chicago, I would have offered to take you to some of my favorite places to get a milkshake.
I LOVE milkshakes! Aww dude, maybe in the future!
I was surprised at the prices those are not bad at all
i wonder if the roller could help with small normal fdm? doesn't seem hard to make
You’ll need another motor for it and another heater (i think the ones in the video is heated)
That costs too much
Inappropriate cargo shorts are peak nerd😂😂
Oh dude. In a sea of suits, I stood out. :)
i do not think the machine at 24:00 has a better print volume to price than my cr30 : D
I live near Milwaukee, I would have gone to this if I would have known.
Awe-inspiring content.
For anyone else wondering, @2:15 he says "thousand-pound gaylords". At first I thought this was some kind of rude, crass joke, but actually a "gaylord" is an industry term for a giant, pallet-sized box. They are often used to store bulk raw materials like pellets and resins. Who knew?
How much did it cost to print that ABS stool at the end of your video ?
This is very cool, some new cutting edge technology, always a joy to watch. That stool they made is very nice. But printing it in solid will could cost a couple of hundred for material don't you think? So it is nice, but not really super viable as a business i guess. But still cool!
a doggo house in mass production
I just wish the advanced high temperature polymers would get cheaper to the point it isn't the machine limiting their usage, I even thought of getting a high temperature hot end and bed but.... damn don't think I would spend hundreds of dollars on a one kilo spool, tho I bet they only tend to get cheaper with time as well. You guys that have been printing for way longer than me probably can tell the evolution in PETG pricing and such.
Need to put roller on normal FDM printers.
is it just an impression or most of the machines in this video do not have the nozzle fan? as the man at essentium said, to have stronger bond (as for nylon) you turn off the fan. what is your experience?
Was Xerox there? I wanna' see their liquid metal printing in action!!!
Hanzhen harmonic drive gear , robot arm gear , over 30 years experience
UV chambers, wouldn't be too expensive to make I guess?? Right??? Maybe?? :) And that 179K for the essentium is actually really cheap! I mean, million dollar machines are normal in businesses. Very nice.
we all are waiting for a desktop 300-400$ printer which could print peek with dual extrusion for supports...
Essentium wins the day, no doubt.
2:15 a thousand pound what now?
I think we found Papa Smurf
gosh darn, i talked myself out of going here this year
Awww shoot. GO NEXT YEAR!
That would be a skinny house.
You have the best energy!!!! How do you get this hair shit going on?! please, an answer on the hair?!
the question is: an AON3D or 50 prusa MK3S?
That’s a real questions companies have to consider. Each option has its advantages and disadvantages
😲🔥💕😍👌👍
Dear subtitles,
2:16 pardon me WHAT
Just to ask a 'dumb' question how fast could an esentium print a speed benchy?
I’ll ask :)
@@3DPrintingNerd Cool! thanks! I was just thinking that they had said how fast it was printing some specific parts, but I was kind of thinking of an apples to apples comparison.
whats the measurements for us metric people? 😭
Big, really big, and holy cow thats big
The AON M2+ features a 450x450x580mm actively heated build volume ;)
"Largest build volume to price"
yeah I don't think so.
This is some pretty whitepilling content. Can't wait to see some of the ideas expand a bit more.
Makes "almost anything" but not HONEST POLITICIAN’S..
Amazing machines, hope they help people.
👍🏻
ir sauna is not a proper sauna. I know because Im from finland. Finland is the land of sauna, joulupukki and lakes.
Probably not a ‘proper’ HUMAN sauna, but very proper for the job it was designed for.
I've got a check right here for $600k. Just don't cash it.
I'd enjoy this if my workshop wasn't destroyed in a b&e. Sorry Joel. I may have to unjoin the chan to save up money. Music and technology are my passion and 90 percent of what I have accumulated is gone. At least they left me an old Jackson guitar that I'm restoring, a 5 string bass that was by pure chance in a different room at the time and broke everything with a display ot was in a shelf. Didn't touch my printers though as I'm sure they didn't know what they were. In their excitement broke my ps5 and left it. It's just stuff though ehh. Insurance doesn't cover the prs guitar I bought when I could finally afford a guitar worth more than a few hundred or the passion for making by teaching myself to code again led to as a way of dealing with mental illness ... sorry. It's not anyone but my problem. None of it is covered either because I didn't report it to police within a reasonable time apparently. I was 37 before I could afford a decent guitar, 23 years after I began playing.
Oh man this SUCKS I’m so sorry :(
@@3DPrintingNerd no worries man. You didn't do it but I appreciate it. I know who did and they couldn't help it. Long story brother, I have it all back but it's all in pieces so I salvaged some ram and an old gpu plus some other stuff but the rest is e-waste, splintered wood and garbage now. Can't press charges on cancer if it kills someone so. Cryptic, I know and I'm sorry but I'm more hurt by sentimental value loss than money to replace. I'm not making any sense. Sorry, I had to vent. Thanks for the kind words, you're a real person.
Masks? Social Distancing?
Yes and yes! Masks were only removed during interview segments if the person I was talking to was comfortable with it.
You're a big dude. Or everyone at this show is tiny lol
No point in printing grips - way faster to mass produce using injection molding. This whole industry is filled with bloat and inefficiency.
These companies seriously need to stop misusing buzzwords like "utility." There is absolutely nothing utilitarian about that "FUV." It's got about as much utility as my motorcycle.
I mean, I sort of see your point. Though, a golf cart is a utility vehicle, right? Plus, I just want to say, I bet your motorcycle is awesome.
Well, let’s see….
Three wheels, so more stable than a motorcycle.
Frame, so more protection from other vehicles.
Frame, so more protection from the elements.
These are being touted as delivery vehicles, and for First Responders.
They have utility… Maybe not for YOU, but many folks will find them utile….
@@ernestgalvan9037 mhm but doesn't every vehicle fundamentally have utility? It has some method of propulsion and can carry someone or something. Otherwise, it would be a sculpture. So a buzzword that doesn't even mean anything.