Got to say I'm kind of confused. Yeah, that's an interesting concept. Can't deny that. However, that is the cost of a Roland Mill. You can get a 98mm milling disk of a hybrid ceramic block that has a 220 mpa flexural strength for 70 bucks and mill around 30 restorations out of that. Printing final restorations makes a lot of sense on the low end but that's about it.
The Midas will bring many offices the ability to print and deliver final ceramic crowns within 45 minutes at a cost of about $25 including the design studio. The printed crowns typically are more precise than a milled crown. This is just the beginning.
@@3DprintSpecialist Let's be honest here. I know you can bill that as a ceramic, but that is not a ceramic. You know it and I know it. Ceramics aren't water soluble, and have no water sorption. Ceramics flexural strength remains consistent as they age. This material will absorb water, it is slightly soluble, and it loses strength as it ages and oxidizes. It will have more microleakage faster than any ceramic material. It's a composite resin. That's it.
@@3DprintSpecialist I have read multiple studies relating to all modern hybrid materials, which is what this is, except this has a lower filler content and will absorb more water than something like Grandio or Enamic, so in practice it probably won't even last as well as them, and it appears isn't even as cheap as them either.
I don’t think you’ve looked at the ceramic crown resin then. It’s not just like other materials. What’s a good email and I’ll send you some specific info on it.
nah man. If I have to buy a 3 pack of capsules in order to print 3 crowns (if 1 crown is all you can fit), theres no way its cost effective for me. Unless the capsules are re-fill able (doubtful), this just seems MORE wasteful than a traditional resin printer.
If you accidentally get dirty on your resin printer, how to clean the outside part yourself?
Are they single use capsules? What’s the price point for the capsules ?
Cost?
Got to say I'm kind of confused. Yeah, that's an interesting concept. Can't deny that. However, that is the cost of a Roland Mill. You can get a 98mm milling disk of a hybrid ceramic block that has a 220 mpa flexural strength for 70 bucks and mill around 30 restorations out of that.
Printing final restorations makes a lot of sense on the low end but that's about it.
The Midas will bring many offices the ability to print and deliver final ceramic crowns within 45 minutes at a cost of about $25 including the design studio. The printed crowns typically are more precise than a milled crown. This is just the beginning.
@@3DprintSpecialist Let's be honest here. I know you can bill that as a ceramic, but that is not a ceramic. You know it and I know it. Ceramics aren't water soluble, and have no water sorption. Ceramics flexural strength remains consistent as they age. This material will absorb water, it is slightly soluble, and it loses strength as it ages and oxidizes. It will have more microleakage faster than any ceramic material. It's a composite resin. That's it.
You’ve tested and examined the ceramic crown resin to know that?
@@3DprintSpecialist I have read multiple studies relating to all modern hybrid materials, which is what this is, except this has a lower filler content and will absorb more water than something like Grandio or Enamic, so in practice it probably won't even last as well as them, and it appears isn't even as cheap as them either.
I don’t think you’ve looked at the ceramic crown resin then. It’s not just like other materials. What’s a good email and I’ll send you some specific info on it.
This is Like Coffee Nobody likes capsules …
nah man. If I have to buy a 3 pack of capsules in order to print 3 crowns (if 1 crown is all you can fit), theres no way its cost effective for me. Unless the capsules are re-fill able (doubtful), this just seems MORE wasteful than a traditional resin printer.
i am also considering that, the cost would not suppose to be nice
price 👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎