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Poll

How important do you think 3D printing will be to the upcoming century?

Worthless: 3D printing is nothing but a nerd fad that won't leave hobbyist workshops.
- 6 (3%)
Unimportant: 3D printing will become common but won't be useful for much other than tiny full plastic objects.
- 8 (4%)
Minor Importance: 3D printing will function as a light industry that will coexist with existing manufacturing methodologies.
- 43 (21.4%)
Moderate Importance: 3D printing will challenge and slowly replace a large number of existing manufacturing businesses.
- 104 (51.7%)
Major Importance: 3D printing will completely flip the table on conventional manufacturing and quickly destroy existing business for anything you can make with them.
- 20 (10%)
Critical: 3D printing will disrupt conventional ideals of work and money so much that they collapse and are replaced in a paradigm shift.
- 20 (10%)

Total Members Voted: 199


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Author Topic: 3D Printer Printing Thread  (Read 33975 times)

Sheb

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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #375 on: June 01, 2013, 03:12:14 am »

Well, "soldiers" kinda imply an organized army, which by definition can only happen in civilized place. But you always had warriors.
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DrPoo

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Re: 3D Printing Thread: Would you copy a building?
« Reply #376 on: June 01, 2013, 04:11:28 am »

You can make a fully functional gun from a 3d printer.

A really shitty, inaccurate, one shot gun that is more likely to explode in your hands than pose any real threat to anyone.
No fear factor at all, might as well pull out a water pistol. The burglar would laugh at you.
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Yoink

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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #377 on: June 01, 2013, 08:02:14 am »

Could always throw the printer at 'em. :P
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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #378 on: June 01, 2013, 08:04:48 am »

Well if your printer prints printers then your printed printers could print printers to throw at people who don't print printers.

MonkeyHead

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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #379 on: June 01, 2013, 08:11:11 am »

3D printed flamethrower, anyone?

Max White

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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #380 on: June 01, 2013, 08:13:08 am »

So question: How feasible is the home 3d printer that can print metal objects?

SalmonGod

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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #381 on: June 01, 2013, 08:18:33 am »

So question: How feasible is the home 3d printer that can print metal objects?

It's actually not too different from ones that print plastic.  They deposit layers of metal powder, which are then fused with heat.
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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #382 on: June 01, 2013, 09:16:03 am »

That kinda metal dosent sound very durable. Though if we one day can have metal printers that can print metal strong enough for use in guns, i might be afraid of nerds that would do that :P
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forsaken1111

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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #383 on: June 01, 2013, 11:21:48 am »

The problem with the metal deposition is that it never gets tempered and never forms a good crystalline lattice. Its like a bunch of welds on top of other welds rather than sheets of metal welded together. The welds are usually the weakest point (unless you use friction stir welding I guess). The current metal printers we have just weld on top of welds on top of welds which as I understand makes for a very brittle material.
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Eagleon

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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #384 on: June 01, 2013, 11:56:31 am »

On the other hand heating to a temperature to drop into a temper is a lot easier than heating to cast. It's not undoable. It'll probably happen when regular 3D printing is a mainstream, commercialized thing, and the market for it is a sure thing - I'm thinking a little butane or propane torch attachment to do the final heat, and then the printing platform would drop away and the object would fall into the quenching medium, and lots of frivolous lawsuits when people set it all next to their futon.
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DWC

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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #385 on: June 01, 2013, 12:19:30 pm »

Yeah, metals will always have this problem of fracturing along their welds, which would be everywhere on a 3d printer. Not really sure how this could be mitigated considering how a 3d printer functions.
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Mech#4

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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #386 on: June 01, 2013, 12:51:28 pm »

Could you create alternating layers of metal? Kind of like what they do with plywood. Or... you could create a form that dissipated stress evenly across the entire object by an internal structure. It's interesting to think of what shapes a 3D printer could create which the current methods of industry can't achieve.

I remember seeing some pens that were all spindly and twisted, too complex for a mould to create.
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misko27

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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #387 on: June 01, 2013, 06:39:05 pm »

Peopel will only return to the purpose of the thread if the thread's purpose changes, appearantly...
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Eagleon

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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #388 on: June 01, 2013, 07:08:12 pm »

Could you create alternating layers of metal? Kind of like what they do with plywood. Or... you could create a form that dissipated stress evenly across the entire object by an internal structure. It's interesting to think of what shapes a 3D printer could create which the current methods of industry can't achieve.

I remember seeing some pens that were all spindly and twisted, too complex for a mould to create.
There are all kinds of workarounds to poor materials that mechanical engineers have in their toolkit, yeah. They really only go so far. Bootstrapping your equipment by just making furnace and molds might honestly make the most sense if it's a part that gets stressed, but metal isn't cheap, and neither is the heat used to work with it. It would be incredible for everyone if other materials could supersede more metal parts, and that might happen once it actually becomes desirable to do the materials engineering needed for reproducible home use. I think it will help tremendously down the line that someone figured out a way to make graphene using cheap equipment (the lightscribe DVD thing), and in a printer-friendly way too.
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DWC

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Re: 3D Philosophy Of War Thread
« Reply #389 on: June 01, 2013, 07:13:29 pm »

I forgot about how much stress would be in the form with 3d printed metal, since the layers would cool at different rates, you'd have stress on the welds. You could layer them however you like on however many axes, but it'd be something like cast aluminum, it'd be extremely prone to fracturing along it's layers.

I'd think maybe they could 3d print a metal part and then reforge it somehow? Or maybe find an alloy or material best suited for this kind of manufacturing. The more I think about it, the more inherit problems I see with 3d printing.
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