7 Things you didn’t know about 3d printing

Existing for over 3 decades now, 3D Printing has rapidly altered our way of living with its exceptionally extraordinary uses. A 3D printed has gained possession in many areas of expertise for producing various products, meanwhile replacing the traditional methods of manufacturing in some sectors.

A functioning of a 3D printer isn’t hard to understand.

Fundamentally, a design/blueprint of the product to be manufactured is inserted into the printer via software, further printed into successive layers of material like glass, paper, plastic, wood, assembling one layer at a time, ultimately builds the whole product.

As a matter of fact, 3D Printing still involves speed issues, and the cost of production is not that reasonable, placing it inferior to the traditional methods in some cases.

Believe it or not, 3D printer can do things that can crumble the existing practices and technology and can stand tall for the coming centuries with inevitability.

Replacing human organs with 3D Printed organs

3D printing on the bone

Reports commit, we would be able to transplant a whole new ‘printed’ human organ with the ‘original’ one. Still a decade away, at least. Scientists and researchers are still working on making it a reality.

‘Skin graft printing’ is being developed, which can be applied directly to the burn victims and skin cancer patients. We have already printed kidney cells and sheets of cardiac tissue that beat like a real heart. It is making a difference. There’s a lot to come though.

Preserving resources with 3D Printing

Building large facilities and producing thousands of products to reap the benefits from your resources spent on infrastructure and further disposing the material is old school now.

3d printing pens permits you to use the minimum amount of resources required from the base material and using the remaining material to build another object. Thus, no wastage. You can get the best 3d pens at affordable prices. Moreover, you can print the desired the number of objects with this tech, ensuring that there’s no excess of supply and hence, saving more.

No software expertise needed to print an object with 3D printer

Computer-aided-designs(CAD) programs enable us to modify and edit 3-dimensional objects according to our requirements, however they are not associated directly with the printing and the ultimate processing of the product.

Don’t worry even if you are utterly new to the software needed to make a blueprint of the object you need. You don’t need to learn anything, although 3D printing software is not really harsh and difficult to understand.

There are over 5,00,000 digital blueprints uploaded on the net that can be downloaded or shared, which can assist you and cut down your work by directly providing access to the designs of the object. Feeding them to your 3D printer will help you print the object without any more hurdles.

Fax objects with 3D printers

Zeus, the world’s first all-in-one 3D printer is capable of printing 3D objects, copying 3D objects, scanning 3D objects, and even faxing 3D objects to other printers uninterruptedly.

Other features of this printer include meshing, auto-levelling, slicing and auto-calibration accompanied with a 1.7 GHz high-speed processor.

Imagine scanning an item on your printer in Japan and faxing it to someone with a printing machine in the US and the printer in the latter would just print out the same exactly like a traditional one would do with a document. Yeah, Modish!

3D Printers are actually Lego in disguise (A lot like them)

Legos are made of Acrylonitrile butadiene styrene(ABS), a petroleum based plastic which is also used in the process of 3D printing termed as ‘Fused Deposition Modelling’(FDM). This process uses two kinds of materials, one is ‘ABS’ and the other is ‘Polylactic acid’(PLA).

Polylactic acid is a non-toxic bioplastic derived from corn starch and is used to make cough syrups and other sugars. This is the reason for the sweet aroma that diffuses during printing.

Print almost anything and everything

Image result for 3d printer on pizza

Print a Pizza if you’re hungry. Print a chocolate if you crave it. Print a piece of wood for your model. Just print anything.

With the emergence of 3D printers, people have been able to find innovative uses to it and developed high-tech printers that can even print a human now, sarcastically said, but possibility of that too exists in the future. You can even print a 3D printer with a 3D printer.

Demarcation does not exist in the world of 3D Printing.

You possibly would be able to print wood, stone and metal in the future. Nobody knows.

3D Printers are affordable and available to everyone

The splendid nature of 3D Printers has been a wonderful attraction in the recent years but the funny thing is that people still think that they can’t afford this tech.

Here’s the reality. You can get a 3D Printing tech if you’re ready to spare 300 dollars while there’s a 3D printing pencil for 100 dollars as well.

So, if you really want to own this technology, damn sure you can. They are definitely not that expensive out there unless you are looking forward to commence a fully operational manufacturing firm out there.

There’s more. Something important.

3D Printers aren’t really printers. These so-called ‘Printers’ are actually ‘additive manufacturers’, pretty similar to Star Trek’s replicators.

Isn’t really associated with printing. Keep that in mind.

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