Sponsors

Recommended
  • Rule 34
    Rule 34
    by Charles Stross

    Stross delves into a possible future where 3D printers become commonplace - and explores the problems that could result. 

  • Printing in Plastic: Build Your Own 3D Printer (Technology in Action)
    Printing in Plastic: Build Your Own 3D Printer (Technology in Action)
    by James Floyd Kelly, Patrick Hood-Daniel
  • 3Dconnexion SpaceNavigator SE (Standard Edition) 3D Navigation Device USB ( 3DX-700028 )
    3Dconnexion SpaceNavigator SE (Standard Edition) 3D Navigation Device USB ( 3DX-700028 )
    3D Connexion
  • The Homebrew Industrial Revolution: A Low-Overhead Manifesto
    The Homebrew Industrial Revolution: A Low-Overhead Manifesto
    by Kevin A. Carson
  • Mastering Blender
    Mastering Blender
    by Tony Mullen
  • Kindle Wireless Reading Device (6
    Kindle Wireless Reading Device (6" Display, Global Wireless, Latest Generation)
    Amazon.com
  • Blender 3D 2.49 Incredible Machines
    Blender 3D 2.49 Incredible Machines
    by Allan Brito
  • Makers
    Makers
    by Cory Doctorow
  • 3Dconnexion SpacePilot PRO - 3D motion controller - 31 button(s) - wired - USB
    3Dconnexion SpacePilot PRO - 3D motion controller - 31 button(s) - wired - USB
    3D Connexion

Entries in example (2)

Thursday
May152008

Timberland is 3D

Timberland, the makers of fine footwear had a problem. Their traditional product development process involved using 2D designs for 3D objects. That may sound crazy, but this is the way manufacturing has been done for a very long time. It's only recently that 3D technology has begun displacing 2D techniques.

At Timberland the 2D-to-physical-model process was quite laborious, involving painstaking and tedious work by technicians to interpret the 2D designs accurately. Once the smoke cleared and a wood or foam model rested on the table, Timberland reckons the cost was approximately USD$1,200. And that's per model, to say nothing of the turnaround time to get it completed.

Recently they acquired 3D modeling and printing technology (ZCorp & Spectrum) and have reduced their costs and time so much that their design process has fundamentally changed. Instead of "front-loading" the design, they now design and print "innumerable" models and test them vigorously in an effort to find the optimum design.

It's not just faster; it's better.

Via EurekaMagazine

Friday
May022008

3D Printing to the Rescue!

 

Our vision of the future includes a 3D printer in every home, where people may print out objects as required. Even for real-time repairs. This vision is beginning to come true, as Brenda attests in the post below. A broken part was repaired simply by printing a new one. We'll see a lot more of this in the future.