Engineering and technology company, Siemens has installed a 3D printed component in a Slovenian nuclear power plant. The part is a metallic, 108mm diameter impeller for a fire protection pump that is in constant rotating operation.
Three months after it required a 75% stake in the AM company, GE is moving fast with its expansion plans for Concept Laser with more staff and bigger HQ.
Stratasys is now accepting enrolments for 3DHEART, an investigator-initiated trial to explore the benefits of using 3D-printed heart models in pre-op planning. Stratasys will provide in-kind support by printing models to be used in the trial.
Shining 3D is best known for a range of affordable, extrusion-based desktop 3D printers but here at TCT Asia 2017, the company is showing how ambitious it is with expansions into new areas of additive manufacturing technology.
Professional hardware and software manufacturer, Artec 3D has released the Artec Leo, a handheld 3D scanner. The global company has suggested its new product is one of the fastest of its kind in the world, capturing data at up to 80 frames per second
On International Women's Day we highlight some of the work women in the 3D printing industry are doing right now in research labs and pioneering startups.
Advanced ceramics company, 3DCeram has renewed its partnership with the Science of Ceramic Processes and Surface Treatment (SPCTS), signing a three-year collaboration agreement.
Global engineering and technology manufacturer, Renishaw has opened its first North American Additive Manufacturing Solutions Centre in Kitchener, Canada.
Engineering, technical and business services company, Lloyd’s Register (LR) has updated its 2017 framework for additively manufactured metal parts, produced in conjunction with research organisation, TWI.
MakerOS has made available the 1.0 release of its cloud business management tool for 3D printing, design and light fabrication services. During the year-long Public Beta testing run, more than 1,500 services from around the world signed up.
Engineers from the Her Majesty’s Government Communications Centre (HMGCC) are to use 3D printing to reconstruct the missing motor from one of Adolf Hitler’s ‘unbreakable’ Lorenz SZ42 cipher machines.