I have been following the development of 3D printers since I became aware of the 'Reprap' project in 2002. These fascinating machines can make stuff without the machine operator having any manufacturing skills at all, just the ability to operate a computer and load a computer model into the machine. At the moment it's not quite that simple, but it's getting there. I have always held off making/buying one because the print quality of ones I think are affordable is inadequate. About halfway through 2018 I saw a printer I thought was on the cusp of being worth getting, called the Wanhao Duplicator 7. Then two further similar printers were released, the Anycubic Photon and the Creality LD001. These new entrants into the market caused a little price war, and the prices dropped a bit, to the point where my threshold had been reached, and I got an Anycubic Photon.
It is remarkable. You can create something on a computer and over a period of a few hours, it emerges like magic from a vat of smelly, sticky resin.
My first print failed as most of it came off the manufacturing Platten, but this second run, it worked. It really does work. Sorry for the quality of photo, my camera died and the photo is from my tablet, but it shows pen parts and 2 dungeons and dragons type figures for my daughters. I am simply amazed that it really works, and the level of detail visible on the tiny parts. The biggest bit is 42mm high.
The pen cap I printed has a thread on it, and on the outside it's possible to see the 0.15mm wide & deep engraving. Truly remarkable. Fantastic for prototypes, and possibly for production of these pens.
In some ways I do have qualms. I wonder if I am seeing the first signs of the death of
almost all manufacturing industry. If it is an early herald of a disruptor technology, it has been fairly slow in coming, and at the moment is not a real threat. But, imagination can allow one to look ahead and guess what may happen. And having one of these little replicators in every house is imaginable, and think of the profound changes it could cause. No need to buy any manufactured goods. You buy a design and print it at home. So the only factories needed will be the ones making raw materials for printers. No need to ship goods half the way round the planet, no need for delivery companies, and no need for all the trucks. Or any of the workers in any of those industries... As I said, the implications could be very profound if it is a technology that takes off.
It may be a tiny herald of things to come, but it is truly remarkable.
Regards,
Richard.