After a long and challenging process of engineering, designing, constructing, and testing, This marvel is ready for the world.
The 3D printed bridge spans 12.5 meters long and 6.3 meters wide. It took 4 printing robots. 6 months of printing. 4,500 kg of stainless steel, and 1100 km of wire.
The bridge also includes a smart sensor network, to verify its structural integrity.
Before the bridge could be built, a virtual replica had to be created for stress testing
The 3D printing texture gives the bridge a more artistic feel. But the pattern differs in certain sections.
The bridge is currently on display. And will soon be installed over one of the oldest and most famous canals in the center of Amsterdam.
In the near future we'll be able to print bridges on location. Thanks to the initial work by MX3D.
Find more Projects & Services from MX3D:
https://mx3d.com/news/
The BLACKBELT 3D printer is a new type of 3D printer using fused filament fabrication in combination with a unique belt technology. Printing on a belt (patent pending) provides new possibilities, like long prints, printing horizontal overhangs without support and producing series production of same or individual parts.
Find more about Blackbelt on his website:
https://blackbelt-3d.com/
TELIC PARTNERS WITH UNDER ARMOUR’s FORMER INNOVATION DIRECTOR TO LAUNCH 3D PRINTED FOOTWEAR
Boise, Idaho, November 18, 2019 - Telic International LLC has announced today that they have entered into collaboration with Alan Guyan, Founder & CEO of Additive Accelerator LLC, to launch limited edition Telic 3D Printed footwear in 2020. Alan Guyan is the former Innovation Director of Under Armour, who launched Under Armour’s first line of 3D printed training shoes, including UA Architech, Michael Phelps Olympic Edition, Futurist and Ray Lewis Hall of Fame.
Rocco Azzarito, co-founder & CEO of Telic stated his vision: “My grandfather Frank was a shoemaker from Southern Italy and learned how to make shoes one at a time from his father. Rather than use generic sizing, he would custom build shoes according to precise foot measurements; consequently the fit was always perfect. Today, 3D printing allows us to custom build shoes one at a time as Frank did, for a perfect fit every time. 3D print manufacturing is the future of footwear.”
Alan Guyan of Additive Accelerator explained that “The Telic collaboration is another leap into the future for scaling 3D printing and building great products. It will also allow Telic to bring a personalized experience to all their footwear customers, and I’m very excited to share in the next chapter of additive manufacturing footwear to the market.”
ABOUT TELIC INTERNATIONAL LLC
Boise Idaho based Telic is a leading provider of aftersport recovery & comfort footwear. Launched in the U.S. in 2012, the brand is now sold throughout the world. Telic aims to become one of the first footwear brands to incorporate personalized additive manufacturing in production. For more information visit www.telic.com or follow @telicfootwear
ABOUT ADDICTIVE ACCELERATOR LLC
Additive Accelerator, based in Baltimore, Maryland specializes in identifying the best product end-use application for 3D Printing that are scalable, transferable, and profitable. The company
Check out all the fascinating 3DP projects makers brought to the Maker Faire Bay Area!
Thank you to Atom for sponsoring this trip to #MFBA! Check them out at http://atom3dp.com/
? Enjoying the videos? Support my work on Patreon! http://go.toms3d.org/Patreon
? All my video and editing gear https://toms3d.org/my-gear
Created & Developed by "Marc Shönman"
BlackBox is an high-end open-source printer with a water-cooled tool changer.
Join & Follow the full Project on HACKADAY.IO
https://hackaday.io/project/57020-blackbox-tool-changing-3d-printer
Source files, BOM and latest Informations https://layershift.xyz/blackbox3dprinter/
Coordination for all builder & contributors on Discord:
https://discordapp.com/channels/590202568962080768/590202569570123778
I embarked on a year-long journey to find a way to print a 5-piece fashion collection as part of my graduate collection at Shenkar. Using soft materials and flexible patterns, I printed this collection at home.
Partners:, TechFactoryPlus, XLN, Recreus, BQ.
Movie Credits:
Producer and Director: Tsafrir Or Giraffa-pop
Script: Tsafrir Or, Dan Peguine
DP: Omer Lotan
Editor: Tsafrir Or, Amit Schwacht
Color & Design: Arik Weiss
Sound Mix: Marty Shtrubel
Stills Photographer: Daria Ratiner
Model: May Zonshain
Make-up: Lina Katzar
More from Danit Peleg here:
https://danitpeleg.com/
3D printing is a great way to produce quickly and effectively, and the relatively new technique is slowly seeping through in all kinds of fields. RAMLAB (Rotterdam Additive Manufacturing LAB), in collaboration with various organisations, has created the WAAMpeller, the world’s first 3D printed ship’s propeller for the maritime sector.
RAMLAB is the first field lab with 3D metal printers that focuses on the maritime industry. The prototype propeller is 1,350 mm in diameter, made from a nickel aluminium bronze alloy, and weighs about 400 kilograms (882 pounds).
The goal of the project is to build more efficient, cost efficient, and environmentally friendly ships. 3D printing is a great medium for that, as it uses the minimum amount of material required and works mostly autonomously.
A method for printing 3D objects that can control living organisms in predictable ways has been developed by an interdisciplinary team of researchers at MIT and elsewhere. The technique may lead to 3D printing of biomedical tools, such as customized braces, that incorporate living cells to produce therapeutic compunds such as painkillers or topical treatments, the researchers say.
The new development was led by MIT Media Lab Associate Professor Neri Oxman and graduate students Rachel Soo Hoo Smith, Christoph Bader, and Sunanda Sharma, along with six others at MIT and at Harvard University’s Wyss Institute and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. The system is described in a paper recently published in the journal Advanced Functional Materials.
Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/