Now this is a useful pice of kit!

I was thinking how amazing that is, but then I begin to wonder how it can 'print' what it can't scan. eg how does it know that the jaws of the wrench are separate parts?
 
I was thinking how amazing that is, but then I begin to wonder how it can 'print' what it can't scan. eg how does it know that the jaws of the wrench are separate parts?

I guess they fix that once the scan is done just don't show it on the video. You can see the adjuster part selected as a seperate element when they select and make it red.
 
These commercial powder machines are currently very expensive - around £10,000 - but for £1000 you can now buy home versions which use different coloured thermoplastic wire as the feed material - like the plastic cable in a strimmer head.

We saw one being demonstrated at the Gadget Show Live - it was churning out all kinds of 3D objects, even hollow ones, but more slowly than the professional versions. You could have produced the wrench but it would take longer and would need to make it in separate parts like the original metal version.

Apart from the control circuit board, even the home machines can produce the parts needed to make another machine! You just need to remember to make a full set of spares before a part breaks!

Richard
 
I will take it on faith that Snopes is correct. That is remarkable technology.
 
The "printers" themselves have been around for at least a decade, it's a remarkable technology. You can now not only draw things on CAD that are impossible to machine, you can make them as well!
 
Not Just Machinery, Human Organs Too

There was a TV programme about a chap that grows organs for humans. He used a "printing" machine, using the same principle as the bubble jet, to spray the cells / medium so that they grew to a 3D shape. The example used in the programme was a thorax, shown materialising out of the "printer" tray.
 
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Can it really "know" which parts move and how, and also "know" how the different moving parts interact with each other? Replicating that complex drilling head that they showed at the start of the film, no way surely. I think I'm with Elton...:)
 
Can it really "know" which parts move and how, and also "know" how the different moving parts interact with each other? Replicating that complex drilling head that they showed at the start of the film, no way surely. I think I'm with Elton...:)

Ordinary cad cam software provides the parts, and the tolerances between them. Then just print. It's quite old technology, it's just becoming cheaper and more usable.

You can even buy 3D chocolate printers now, to make elaborate chocolate shapes.
 
The scanner puts the image in but there's some pretty clever software that "guesses" what are moving parts, etc. It's the same technology as image enhancement and face recognition plus a few other techniques all thrown in for good measure. The scanning (which can take hours for a complex object) is one real breakthrough. The other is the printer itself. In some ways it isn't that different to the layer techniques that have been used for building prototypes for some time - a layer of a plastic material is sprayed onto a surface by a nozzle controlled by a CNC device. The big problem there is that you can only get smaller as you built up of course. The idea of using the un-fixed powder as surface to build on is very clever.

It's a very clever piece of kit all round and the idea of taking one into space is novel - but, having seen what some ship's or boat's workshops can turn out from a small lathe, a bench drill and a decent welding kit, I'm not sure it's a giant leap forwards yet. We're a while from knocking a new turbocharger on the way to Newton Creek when the old one gives up, that's for sure.
 
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