Mysterious Wire-Feed, Powderless Metal 3D Printer to Be Unveiled Sometime This Year

RAPID

Share this Article

If you’ve been keeping up with 3D printing news at all, you’re probably pretty familiar with metal 3D printing by now. It’s one of the fastest-growing sectors in the industry; just about every major 3D printer manufacturer is scrambling to keep up with the rapidly developing metal technology. Not only is it becoming less expensive and more accessible, but material capabilities keep expanding, with new metals and alloys being introduced on what seems like a weekly basis by certain companies.

3dmakerjetEven if you have only a basic knowledge of metal 3D printing, you probably know that it’s done with powder materials, using laser sintering to fuse together layers of metallic powders. This differs greatly from resin printers, which deposit layers of melted filament via extruder, and it’s why metal printers, for a long time, have been large, pricey machines relegated to industrial applications. But that’s all about to change, as two companies have partnered to prototype a new metal 3D printer that prints with wire-feed technology instead of powder

zbotZBOT/Guangzhou DNSPOWER Design Co. is a Chinese manufacturer that produces a variety of industrial and desktop 3D printers. Their US supplier, 3D MakerJet, Inc., is based in Orlando, Florida, and together the new companies have developed an as-yet unnamed printer that will print metal from extruded filament rather than powder. Not much detail has been released at this time, but the printer will use wire-like metal alloy filament, such as copper, that will be fed into the printer and extruded like a resin filament would be.

Wire-feed additive manufacturing isn’t unheard of, but at this point it’s still very rarely used due to a number of limitations. (You can read a nice overview of wire-feed additive manufacturing here.) Many experts agree that it has a lot of potential, but so far it’s been pretty much stuck in the research and development phase. According to 3D MakerJet and ZBOT, however, their new printer is going to be an “industry first” that will to drag powderless wire-feed printing into the light.

comingsoon_image3An exact release date hasn’t been provided, but 3D MakerJet says that it will be this year. It’s still just a prototype, and it’s currently shrouded in mystery: the closest thing we’re getting to specifications is that it is expected to be about 3 feet tall, and 2’6″ wide. Not a very big guy, then, as metal printers go, and that’s part of its appeal. 3D MakerJet states that the printer will bring a lot of advantages to industrial metal additive manufacturing, “including those of mobile mounted printers.”

“On site, on the job, these printers have the potential to eliminate the high prices and long lead times of back-ordered, hard-to-source and even obsolete parts,” said John Crippen, 3D MakerJet President. “The market for metal printing is continuing to grow and 3D MakerJet is poised to introduce a true breakthrough.”

That’s about all the information we have right now, but if the printer is scheduled to be released this year, then more details should be forthcoming very soon. 3D MakerJet also has a few other products that should be coming soon, including a full-body 3D scanner and a candy 3D printer. Discuss this new prototype and impending release in the Powderless Metal 3D Printer forum over at 3DPB.com.

Share this Article


Recent News

Europe’s New Rocket Set to Launch Polymer 3D Printing Technology into Space

Senators King and Collins Advocate 3D Printing Adoption for Department of Defense



Categories

3D Design

3D Printed Art

3D Printed Food

3D Printed Guns


You May Also Like

World’s Largest Polymer 3D Printer Unveiled by UMaine: Houses, Tools, Boats to Come

The University of Maine has once again broken its own record by unveiling the largest polymer 3D printer in the world. Surpassing its 2019 achievement, the new Factory of the...

Featured

Changing the Landscape: 1Print Co-Founder Adam Friedman on His Unique Approach to 3D Printed Construction

Additive construction (AC) is much more versatile than it seems, at first: as natural as it is to focus on the exciting prospect of automated home construction, there’s far more...

Featured

US Army Corps of Engineers’ Megan Kreiger on the State of Construction 3D Printing

Despite last year’s gloomy reports about the financial state of the additive manufacturing (AM) industry, there’s no doubt that we’re actually witnessing the birth of a sector rather than its...

Featured

Profiling a Construction 3D Printing Pioneer: US Army Corps of Engineers’ Megan Kreiger

The world of construction 3D printing is still so new that the true experts can probably be counted on two hands. Among them is Megan Kreiger, Portfolio Manager of Additive...