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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Kennewick, WA
Posts: 213
Likes: 48
Liked 314 Times in 113 Posts
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And you don't even need to buy one if you live in the right area.
A year or two ago Kitplanes Magazine (an airplane magazine) had an article about a machine shop in the San Francisco bay area that is open to the public. Besides lathes, milling machines, and other normal machine shop tools, they had one of those 3D printers connected to a PC with AutoCAD. Bring in your CAD drawing of a part, or draw it there, and 3D print the part. All you pay is time and material costs. Pretty slick and inexpensive way to prototype a part.
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Larry Merk |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: West Chester, PA
Posts: 271
Likes: 1
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Work has begun to try printing artificial human organs, such as kidneys. The cartridge is filled with cloned cells. Early attempts did not hold up well. I read somewhere (probably Smithsonian Magazine) that future prototypes will be injected onto a sort of scaffold, to stabilize the structure while the layers are being printed.
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Tony Curcio 1860 STK |
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