3D Printing Molds With Metal Paste: The Mantle Process Explained

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  • Опубликовано: 2 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 9

  • @the_dengineer
    @the_dengineer 7 месяцев назад +1

    I really like the toggling of 3D print then shape over N layers. Super smart. Kudos to the team that developed this.

  • @Mr-Highball
    @Mr-Highball Год назад +3

    Neat, I've been experimenting with a similar concept (albeit at a much smaller scale) where a water soluble binder is used and freezed inside of a traditional mold then sintered.
    I'll be watching this company 👀

    • @MrBeaach
      @MrBeaach Год назад

      pva glue binder? , what do you think of the Rapidia,

    • @Mr-Highball
      @Mr-Highball Год назад

      @MrBeaach slightly different binder but I'm still working through a good ratio of ingredients. It looks interesting but anytime I see _request a quote_ it normally means it's well out of my hobbyist budget

  • @JoeyBlogs007
    @JoeyBlogs007 Год назад +4

    Mind boggling how this tech is evolving.

  • @ChrisTrunek
    @ChrisTrunek Год назад +4

    man that is a complicated process, results look great though. what about revising the mold like what is almost standard practice in injection molding? Still have to send it out for any final revisions unless youre setup for mold cutting. insane tech!

  • @pauljones9150
    @pauljones9150 Год назад +3

    Whoah pretty cool

  • @kiloohm
    @kiloohm Год назад +2

    ingenious

  • @frikkied2638
    @frikkied2638 Год назад

    Metal paste is very similar to what Rapidia is doing, I thought they did it first in which case I would have thought they had the patent.