Bentley 3D Prints Entire 1/3rd Scale Models of Cars With New Stratasys 3D Printers

IMTS

Share this Article

Last week, the headline news within the 3D printing industry was the announcement of the new Objet500 Connex3 3D printer that Stratasys showed off at Solidworks World in San Diego. Immediately following the news, just about every technology blogger and news writer picked up on the story, and the 3D printing market suddenly became much more interesting. The ability to print out in numerous materials and mixtures of materials, as well as the ability to mix 3 different colors to make hundreds of colors, was truly a revolutionary moment within the industry.

bentley1Today we got the first real look inside a company who has been using this new printer for several months now. The company? Bentley Motors, the maker of one of the most expensive luxury line of vehicles on the planet. The Objet500 allows them to print our near exact 3d models of their vehicles, scaled down to 33%. From wheels, to emblems, to shifters, to tailpipes, the printer can produce extremely accurate models of them all.   This allows designers to see exactly what a vehicle will look like before it is actually manufactured. They also use the printer to print out actual life sized models of parts for the vehicles as well. Nearly every part will be prototyped as scaled down versions, so that designers can assess their creations on an actual real world model. David Hayward, operations and projects manager at the Bentley Design Studio, explains the company’s use of the Objet30, and the new Objet500 3D printers,

The accuracy of the Objet30 3D Printer enables us to take a full-size part and scale it down to produce a one-tenth scale model. Once we have approval at this scale, we can move onto our larger Objet500 Connex 3D Printer to produce one-third scale models, full-sized parts as well as parts that combine different material properties without assembly.

If you were to read the following statement from the early 20th century by W.O. Bentley, the company’s founder, the use of these printers would certainly make sense,

The company’s objectives are to build a fast car, a good car, the best in its class. Maintaining this tradition for automotive excellence and prestige is a fundamental focus for Bentley as it combines innovative technologies with traditional craftsmanship at every stage of development and production.

This is without a doubt the future of prototyping. The Objet500 by Stratasys allows Bentley, and will allow many other manufacturers to prototype using multiple materials within one print, saving time and material, and most importantly, creating a near perfect final production.

The following is a video inside a Bentley manufacturing facility, where you will see the printer in use.

Discuss the Objet500 Printer and it’s future uses here: https://3dprintboard.com/showthread.php?1609-Bentley-is-already-using-Stratasys-Objet500-3D-Printers-in-Big-Ways

Share this Article


Recent News

3D Printing News Unpeeled: Asahi Kasei Enters 3D Printing

GE Additive Transforms into Colibrium Additive in New Brand Move



Categories

3D Design

3D Printed Art

3D Printed Food

3D Printed Guns


You May Also Like

Gorilla Sports GE’s First 3D Printed Titanium Cast

How do you help a gorilla with a broken arm? Sounds like the start of a bad joke a zookeeper might tell, but it’s an actual dilemma recently faced by...

Nylon 3D Printed Parts Made More Functional with Coatings & Colors

Parts 3D printed from polyamide (PA, Nylon) 12 using powder bed fusion (PBF) are a mainstay in the additive manufacturing (AM) industry. While post-finishing processes have improved the porosity of...

$25M to Back Sintavia’s Largest Expansion of Metal 3D Printing Capacity Since 2019

Sintavia, the digital manufacturing company specializing in mission-critical parts for strategic sectors, announced a $25 million investment to increase its production capacity, the largest expansion to its operations since 2019....

Velo3D Initiates Public Offering in a Bid to Strengthen Financial Foundations and Drive Future Growth

Velo3D (NYSE: VLD) has been among a number of publicly traded 3D printing firms that have attempted to weather the current macroeconomic climate. After posting a challenging financial report for 2023,...