AMS 2025

Printing tiny, high-precision objects in a matter of seconds

AM Research Military

Share this Article

Researchers at EPFL have developed a new, high-precision method for 3D-printing small, soft objects. The process, which takes less than 30 seconds from start to finish, has potential applications in a wide range of fields, including 3D bioprinting.

Share this Article


Recent News

3D Printing Predictions for 2025: Metal 3D Printing

Will There Be 3D Printed Autophage Missiles?



Categories

3D Design

3D Printed Art

3D Printed Food

3D Printed Guns


You May Also Like

Featured

Raytheon Taps Ursa Major for 3D Printed Solid Rocket Motors

Ursa Major, a Colorado-based company specializing in leveraging additive manufacturing (AM) for rocket propulsion, announced a successful missile flight test conducted with Raytheon, an RTX company, as part of a...

Could Axiom Space and India Disrupt the Global Space Market?

Axiom Space has set its sights on building the next space station to replace the International Space Station (ISS) and is currently in the early stages of developing its first...

America Makes Awards $4M to Ursa Major to Qualify 3D Printed Copper Rocket Engines

In the third phase of a partnership that started in 2021, America Makes, the Manufacturing USA institute based in Youngstown, Ohio, has awarded $4 million to Colorado’s Ursa Major Technologies,...

5 Stages to True Scale: Make Your Own Fleet of Metal 3D Printers

The additive manufacturing (AM) industry is now approaching true scale, where manufacturing is happening at volume. Critical parts, including millions of implants and thousands of rocket propulsion units, are being...