Haha, yes, they are expensive but the amount of craftsmanship and attention to detail is astounding! This video enumerates ~17 steps, but those are just the main ones. The official Glidewell manual for creating crowns has 86 steps and includes quality control checks all throughout the process.
The resin tray for this printer is junk. You need to replace it after 8-10 runs and it's about $125 a set or something like that. Very difficult to use. Don't waste your money on this machine. Glidewell lab is using it because they have a support team of 20+ in R&D and a 100+ IT team to support it. Small lab, save that $7000 for something else.
LOL... this is technology for technology's sake... the form is very basic, no porcelain support and the fit is extremely poor....even without magnification you can see a gap around the margin....is this the best it can do..???... if you're going to showcase a job at least make it nice, this is poor.
OL.. yes, but to invest such large amounts of money and get such pitiful results is ridiculous... what was the person who bought this thinking..??... you could wax a coping like this in the amount of time it would take to scan it....pathetic.
scan, mill, fit is ok for non aesthetic areas like molars but anything in the anterior is similar result to a good metal ceramic crown... I still do 80% of my work in metal ceramic...emax for anterior and zirconia for custom abutments... a good metal ceramic crown is still the best... lots of prosthodontists are going back to metal ceramic.passed the test of time.
in a nut shell... cad cam is ok and I use it a fair bit but if you're using this technology at least make a nice job... the original video is about cad designed 3d printed crowns which are then manually covered in wax and cast using traditional methods... to spend all that money and do copings as crap as that is ridiculous... he spent tens of thousands to automate a 15 min job....with crap results.. and do you remember tech's like Willy Geller, Oliver Brix, Brian walters, and all the other great techs back in the day... those guys make metal ceramics which would shame any cad /milled solid zirconia crown....
Is this normal in America? If yes this is dangerous. The quality is clearly not there. Where in the world is it ok to have such a large gap between the crown and the die? This don’t look like there is a quality control. The gap, no ceramic supporting modeling. And why are they press it on the metal. No need for that you can do a only LiSi press crown without metal.
Wow way to over-complicated for something so simple I mean for god sakes the vampire teeth they saw that Halloween or pretty I think I could save myself quite a bit just having those implanted I might look like a cone head but that's cool too😄
What kind of material is used to make these dental crowns? So many toxic chemicals in what we use. Now that BPA has been removed from food products, there are still lots of bad chemicals remaining. So how do we know we are not putting that into our bodies via this new technology, which appears to be so promising?
How does one "regrow teeth?" I have never heard of such a thing. Looking it up there is an Alzheimer drug that does encourage the regrowing of teeth. But it's not very commonly used yet or heavily researched. Who knows what side effects the drug has? www.drstevenlin.com/regrow-teeth-study/
wow, I don't feel ripped off paying for a crown now. thank you for this.
Haha, yes, they are expensive but the amount of craftsmanship and attention to detail is astounding! This video enumerates ~17 steps, but those are just the main ones. The official Glidewell manual for creating crowns has 86 steps and includes quality control checks all throughout the process.
2:23 Casting metal on titanium abatment? Tell me more!
How much do they pay at a lab like this. I’m asking because I do the same job at my lab and I feel underpaid
how much you get paid?
what process of cast and which material ar use of investment to pour .
Digital dentistry grows so fast, before you edit the final video the next monolithic multilayer ceramic is public.
The resin tray for this printer is junk. You need to replace it after 8-10 runs and it's about $125 a set or something like that. Very difficult to use. Don't waste your money on this machine. Glidewell lab is using it because they have a support team of 20+ in R&D and a 100+ IT team to support it. Small lab, save that $7000 for something else.
Can 3D Printing Crown develop faster? so this populate all areas in the Dental industry, and provide cheaper, humine price for a Crown.
What is the name of the liquid porcelain i never saw this before all i know is ghe build up
Beautiful video , very informative
So, in the end, they just make a resin & wax coping then cast it.
Was there a bubbles on a crown or it was the light bending
What is the price for 3D printing machine?
How do I get a job dong this?
This is great news! When will rest of us be able to purchase Casting Resin from Autodesk???
Very informative. Thanks for the initiative.
LOL... this is technology for technology's sake... the form is very basic, no porcelain support and the fit is extremely poor....even without magnification you can see a gap around the margin....is this the best it can do..???... if you're going to showcase a job at least make it nice, this is poor.
OL.. yes, but to invest such large amounts of money and get such pitiful results is ridiculous... what was the person who bought this thinking..??... you could wax a coping like this in the amount of time it would take to scan it....pathetic.
scan, mill, fit is ok for non aesthetic areas like molars but anything in the anterior is similar result to a good metal ceramic crown... I still do 80% of my work in metal ceramic...emax for anterior and zirconia for custom abutments... a good metal ceramic crown is still the best... lots of prosthodontists are going back to metal ceramic.passed the test of time.
in a nut shell... cad cam is ok and I use it a fair bit but if you're using this technology at least make a nice job... the original video is about cad designed 3d printed crowns which are then manually covered in wax and cast using traditional methods... to spend all that money and do copings as crap as that is ridiculous... he spent tens of thousands to automate a 15 min job....with crap results.. and do you remember tech's like Willy Geller, Oliver Brix, Brian walters, and all the other great techs back in the day... those guys make metal ceramics which would shame any cad /milled solid zirconia crown....
@@electro1622 You're totally nailed it, man. Watching this video makes me feel totally same about that ridiculous "high technology" integrations.
Is this normal in America? If yes this is dangerous. The quality is clearly not there. Where in the world is it ok to have such a large gap between the crown and the die? This don’t look like there is a quality control. The gap, no ceramic supporting modeling. And why are they press it on the metal. No need for that you can do a only LiSi press crown without metal.
I just hope that one day implants will have the shapes of our original teeth roots. I dislike having screws in my jaw!!!
i am pouring ring when after few min ring was crack.
I remember when the margins were the most important part of a crown, not anymore.
Wow way to over-complicated for something so simple I mean for god sakes the vampire teeth they saw that Halloween or pretty I think I could save myself quite a bit just having those implanted I might look like a cone head but that's cool too😄
The margin looks like crap
Saludos desde México
01-02- 24 watched very interesting topic know new thing
What kind of material is used to make these dental crowns? So many toxic chemicals in what we use. Now that BPA has been removed from food products, there are still lots of bad chemicals remaining. So how do we know we are not putting that into our bodies via this new technology, which appears to be so promising?
I agree with you.... Let mother nature do it's thing, let your teeth rot n fall out and your IQ points drop
Don't call it 3D printed crown please. You are just printing cast wax for investing.
1000 per day! Amazing.
Too many steps waste of time and material. Instead we can make DMLS.
Too many adds
This is a joke we have the technology to regrow a person teeth we don't want fake ones!
How does one "regrow teeth?" I have never heard of such a thing. Looking it up there is an Alzheimer drug that does encourage the regrowing of teeth. But it's not very commonly used yet or heavily researched. Who knows what side effects the drug has? www.drstevenlin.com/regrow-teeth-study/
This is extremely old technology. You should take this post down. Final Crowns can actually be entirely 3D printed but this is not how.