Very cool technology. Here on RUclips we almost always see the hobbyist side of 3D printing but it's really nice to see what the specialized industry stuff is doing too.
Is like if you printed glue onto paper with the office printer, then glued it into a stack and sandblasted away anything without ink on it. It looks expensive, but fast
I have an idea - every Tuesday should be Fk Stratasys Tuesday’s - they just sued every 3d printing company. 1. heated print bed 2. String gauge sensors in print head 3. Using purge towers 4. And 3d printing layer by layer on a print bed ( in general) Hope they go out of business
That's 10-20g/min! An that's with the smaller nozzle. The larger nozzle is 25mm (70X area) diameter and can travel up to 8X faster! This is a truly rapid deposition technology
@@NathanBuildsRobotsyes, to them they did nothing wrong by earning lots of money. To the community of makers waiting for their machine they were a sell out.
@@nicksantitoro no rewards are ever guaranteed in a Kickstarter. Kickstarter is like gambling/investing, never put up anything that you can't afford to lose.
How do the stratasys’ kinematics work? I was very curious about that. They have a rotating bed instead of a typical gantry and make great multi material prints. But how does it do that
Any idea if gridlock printing parts are isotropic? doubt it, but still very cool the range of materials they can make But this is incredible, love your work mate
I still haven't seen a machine combine speed with the quality I'm looking for. I get that time is money but some of these 'fast printers' provide results that I would consider to be embarrassing. Yeah, I'm a Bambu shill but my opinion is my own and they have never paid me a dollar to say it.
So what's stoping them from doing plastic? Make one that does plastic. Sell it to the hobby guys. Use profit to keep company afloat while earning exposure toward closing deals with industrial customers? That might even be fun.
Very cool technology. Here on RUclips we almost always see the hobbyist side of 3D printing but it's really nice to see what the specialized industry stuff is doing too.
That last machine looks like it could compete with injection molding speeds.
not really. with family die, they can inject similar quantity in fraction of time.
@@motastic1714 Still crazy fast for 3D printing - just a continuous stream of layers for multiple prints.
That last printer is something else
Is like if you printed glue onto paper with the office printer, then glued it into a stack and sandblasted away anything without ink on it.
It looks expensive, but fast
@@NathanBuildsRobotsthe world's fastest :D
It’s been around for years
Holy hand grenade 😂 haven't heard that word combo in many years
The last machine is the perfect one for an industrial print farm. Holy shit!
I chatted with Grid Logic when I went to Rapid+TCT. They are cool people with a cool printer!
3D printing is really going HUGE!!!
This video wins the internet easily!
The surgical 3D printing is so futuristic.
🇦🇺🤜🏼🤛🏼😎🍀☮️
Surgical planning 🤯
3d printed motors.. Suppressors, Crazy efficient, High HP Engines..wow!.. Plus it looks RAD🤙🏻
wtf ? it ended on an interesting subject.
nice coverage! Dang those were impressive
the medical stuff is amazing
Surgical training.
' That will be $170,667.88 for your surgical training 3d printed heart '
I’m sure if you 3D printed one out of TPU it’d be just as good 😏
I have an idea - every Tuesday should be Fk Stratasys Tuesday’s - they just sued every 3d printing company.
1. heated print bed
2. String gauge sensors in print head
3. Using purge towers
4. And 3d printing layer by layer on a print bed ( in general)
Hope they go out of business
Some really cool tech.
That's 10-20g/min! An that's with the smaller nozzle.
The larger nozzle is 25mm (70X area) diameter and can travel up to 8X faster!
This is a truly rapid deposition technology
Ok but lets talk about micronics selling out
Nah
Yah
MICRONICS DID NOTHING WRONG!!! 🫳🎤
@@NathanBuildsRobotsyes, to them they did nothing wrong by earning lots of money. To the community of makers waiting for their machine they were a sell out.
@@nicksantitoro no rewards are ever guaranteed in a Kickstarter.
Kickstarter is like gambling/investing, never put up anything that you can't afford to lose.
Love this kind of video. Thanks, Nathan!
The future is so cool.
How do the stratasys’ kinematics work? I was very curious about that. They have a rotating bed instead of a typical gantry and make great multi material prints. But how does it do that
It uses an ink jetting system. There is a line of printheads above the platter that goes from the center of the circle out to the edge
Finally, I did know about the film layer stacking machine but failed to find it again, this machine is just so cool
So the last machine is called impossible object? 👀
Yes
@@NathanBuildsRobots 🙏
The last machine is the CBAM 25 from Impossible Objects.
@@TheRealAirdoo 🙏🤘
The 25 refers to it's ability to move the fiber substrate at 25 feet per minute.
"The supply" LOL bro knows the solution but he's not strong enough to fix it :)
Just put out a Craigslist ad, I’m sure someone will be able to help
"and then..." the video cuts out right there and ends. no cliff hanger, nothing. come on you gotta have an outro?
Just making sure you watch till the end!
@@NathanBuildsRobots clever girl
The video ended so abruptly I thought RUclips malfunctioned 😂
Imagine how one day they will be able to 3D print you a replacement body part.
Closest thing to the Westworld humanoid printer I’ve seen so far!
Any idea if gridlock printing parts are isotropic?
doubt it, but still very cool the range of materials they can make
But this is incredible, love your work mate
Nice..
4:04 guys, guys, hear me out
What body parts would you print?
I still haven't seen a machine combine speed with the quality I'm looking for. I get that time is money but some of these 'fast printers' provide results that I would consider to be embarrassing. Yeah, I'm a Bambu shill but my opinion is my own and they have never paid me a dollar to say it.
So what's stoping them from doing plastic? Make one that does plastic. Sell it to the hobby guys. Use profit to keep company afloat while earning exposure toward closing deals with industrial customers? That might even be fun.
and then
this dude just said, "Cadavers are expensive so.... if you use OUR machine to print out a body, OR organ" haha griftin ain't easy.
Yeah the price of cadavers these days is insane.
@@NathanBuildsRobots 😂😂😂 what's it take like a, 200$ semester Anatomy junior college class.
A tradeshow walkaround video is definitely not worth sitting through a squarespace ad read.
10-20 g/hr lol 🤏