The second batch of benches was 3D printed in CyBe’s R&Do Laboratory rather than on-site. CyBe Construction decided to set a challenge for itself on this particular project – to complete all five benches in less than one working day. It sounds like a dubious challenge, but as a matter of fact it was quite doable – in the end, all five benches were completed in less than four hours, including installing and moving the 3D printer. The print time of each bench was only 35 minutes. At that rate, CyBe says, up to 30 could be produced per day, or up to 10 in one working day.
“We believe this particular process of serial printing is the way prefab factories will work in the future,” the company states.
“The various applications that can be done with the same 3D concrete printer are another advantage,” CyBe Construction says. “Printing these benches has been done with the same Cybe RC3dp printer as we used for the R&Drone Laboratory and manholes. Our printer serves various markets.”
The RC3dp printer was the first mobile concrete 3D printer to be able to move on caterpillar tracks, making on-site 3D printing easy. It also prints at high speed, hence the fast rate at which the company was able to churn out the concrete benches. Dura Vermeer has been thrilled with CyBe Construction’s work, and this recent project shows how far 3D printed concrete construction has come in a very short time – it’s gone from a “yeah, right” concept to a legitimate means of mass production.
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[Source/Images: CyBe Construction]