Comment 69 Re: More Details

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3D Printing Goes Heavy Duty - Complex Metal Parts for Power Generation Equipment

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More Details (Score: 2)

by wildwombat@pipedot.org on 2014-02-25 05:27 (#60)

I wish articles like this had more details. Are Seimens and GE buying 3d printing machines from someone else, or using their own? What metals are they using for the 3d printing? How does the strength of the product compare to alternate manufacturing methods? That being an industry publication I'm sure the people reading it would be able to handle the details. So, does anyone here know the nitty-gritty or links to places with more details of metal based 3d printing?

Cheers,
-WW

Re: More Details (Score: 3, Informative)

by insulatedkiwi@pipedot.org on 2014-02-25 12:12 (#69)

GE is outsourcing to Arcam Systems, everything in the article points to Siemens doing it inhouse, though they don't mention if the machinery is theirs or purchased from someone else. Found a few other articles from them, http://www.industry.siemens.com/topics/global/en/magazines/industry-journal/1-2013/pages/3d-printers-the-future-has-already-begun.aspx and this video shows the machine they're using: http://www.manufacturing.net/news/2013/12/siemens-3d-prints-toughest-christmas-tree-ever which seems to come from MCP systems.. found this talking about their tech: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4odUhDjKHzo, though I think they may have been renamed.

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Time Reason Points Voter
2014-03-02 04:18 Informative +1 lacey@pipedot.org
2014-03-02 09:06 Underrated +1 maxim@pipedot.org

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