TCT Head of Content Laura Griffiths and Senior Content Producer Sam Davies discuss the latest 3D printing news from Stratasys, Shapeways, Materialise and more.
The company known for developing the world’s first wall plug is using SLS 3D printing technology from Sinterit to speed up the process of designing and developing new products.
Link3D has announced the launch of an IoT platform designed to enable direct interaction with additive manufacturing machines to automate quality management systems and derive insights from sensor data.
Shapeways is to list on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) at an initial enterprise value of approximately $410 million after agreeing to merge with SPAC company Galileo Acquisition Corp.
Arizona-based Mechnano has come out of stealth to introduce a technology that enables carbon nanotubes (CNT) to be harnessed in additive manufacturing materials.
The two companies believe the technical challenges of connecting and applying data from design, manufacturing operations, materials properties and inspection have inhibited the ability to consistently apply AM to new designs.
The additive manufacturing pioneer says the trio of machines, which features three different polymer 3D printing processes, aim to accelerate the shift from traditional to additive manufacturing for low-to-mid-volume production applications.
Evonik has announced the development of two new photopolymers which represent the company’s first steps into the VAT photopolymerisation 3D printing market.
3D printing service provider Primary Manufacturing has installed PostProcess Technologies’ DEMI 430 resin removal platform to support its service offering.