Turn Your 3D Printer into an Efficient Mass Production Tool with Magic Maker’s revo

RAPID

Share this Article

revo1Probably one of the most complained about aspects with today’s desktop 3D printers is the fact that they are slow. No, let me correct myself. They aren’t just slow! When it comes to mass manufacturing of goods, if traditional methods were to be compared to an F-16 fighter jet, 3D printing would probably be best compared to your 95-year-old grandfather trying to get out of bed in the morning. Desktop 3D printing, while a tremendous asset for creating quickly produced prototypes, or a single item,  just doesn’t quite yet cut it when it comes to mass production.

This may all be about to change though, if a Canadian company called Magic Maker has anything to say about it. Coming to Kickstarter sometime early next year, their product, called the revo, is a “revocaster which allows a person to make a 3D part using a resin based mold system, very quickly and cost effectively.”

revofeatured

The revo is a rotational casting device which, when combined with 3D printed molds, can create new objects in as little as 10 minutes. Probably half of you reading this article are wondering just how they are supposed to design and print molds for objects. Relax, a mold is just a “negative” of your object. They can quickly and easily be create simply by inverting a design.

revo5Once the mold is 3D printed, it can be filled with a material of your choice, ranging from plastics to wax, chocolate, amber resins, and more. These molds are then placed in the revo, along with other molds if desired, and the revo will then rotate them in order to ensure that the material is pulled into every nook and cranny by force of gravity.

Using multiple molds at the same time can allow for the quick fabrication of many objects at once in just 10 minutes or so of you time. Of course this wouldn’t be needed if you simply want to create one object, but if you intend to create multiples, this allows you to simply print one mold and then create as many as you want in much less time than it would take to 3D print each one.

No word yet on the price of the revo, but we should hear more soon. What do you think? Would you consider buying a device like this to more quickly create objects in the future? Discuss in the revo forum thread on 3DPB.com.

revo3

revo2

Share this Article


Recent News

3D Printing Financials: Velo3D Sees Better Q1 2024 After Difficult Last Quarter

Aerospace OEM Invests $9.1M in Michigan for Metal 3D Printing and More



Categories

3D Design

3D Printed Art

3D Printed Food

3D Printed Guns


You May Also Like

Wisconsin’s Evology Adds Digital Sheet Forming to Service Roster

Evology, a service bureau based in Wisconsin and specializing in serving strategic sectors like aerospace and defense, has added digital sheet forming (DSF) to its repertoire of manufacturing capabilities. Evology...

Boring Company Alum Score $9M for Advanced Composites Manufacturing

Layup Parts, a Huntington Beach, CA-based startup specializing in on-demand manufacturing of parts made from composites, has received $9 million in its latest financing round. Founders Fund, the VC firm...

Featured

Industrial Giant Ingersoll Rand Leads $19M Round Backing Inkbit’s AI-Driven 3D Printing

Inkbit, the Massachusetts-based original equipment manufacturer (OEM) of multi-material, AI-integrated 3D printers, has closed a $19 million financing round. Ingersoll Rand, a US giant in the industrial equipment sector, led...

3YOURMIND & Nigerian Oilfield Services Firm RusselSmith Team Up on 3D Printed Part Inventory

3YOURMIND, the German and U.S. software services provider specializing in digital inventory platforms for additive manufacturing (AM), has partnered with Nigerian oilfield services firm RusselSmith to digitize spare part files...