Shops need both chemical and five-axis laser texturing capabilities to generate patterns that were once considered unattainable.
Siemens and Desktop Metal, Inc. announced today a partnership aimed at accelerating the adoption of additive manufacturing (AM) for production applications with a focus on the world’s largest manufacturers.
NASA JPL’s Bryan McEnerney makes parts that are literally out of this world.
Additive manufacturing in metal helps an F1 race team
At this week’s RAPID + TCT show, the promise of additive manufacturing was on display. There was also talk of challenges facing the industry.
Manufacturing is undergoing a significant transformation—with digitization disrupting the industry
Wohlers Associates and America Makes are partnering to offer a three-day design for additive manufacturing (DfAM) course.
To raise the bar on the status quo in unlimited hydroplanes, Ellstrom Racing started Five-Axis Industries, which in the beginning was essentially a hobby shop specializing in five-axis machining to make difficult-to-manufacture parts from hard metals, including titanium and stainless alloys.
The 3D printing industry has proved itself during the pandemic as a solution to disrupted supply chains.
Desktop Metal Inc., the company founded in 2015 with no plan to produce a production-level printer, is now promoting 3D printing for high-volume serial production under its AM (additive manufacturing) 2.0 initiative.