I can see it working in the niche workboat type stuff but it doesn't make sense to me for production boats - laying up the hull isn't particularly slow is it? fitting it out, internal furnishing, rigging etc all take longer. It would be interesting to see how the weight compares - rotomolded HDPE boats are heavier than GRP equivalents - perhaps clever "infill" can achieve weight reduction. GRP layup is a lot more technical that just slapping glass and resin in a mould these days - you use particular weave of fibre in high stress areas to distribute loads, achieve stiffness etc without adding weight. You possibly can do that with 3D printed braces etc but you need real engineers involved. But I could see it being used to make the original mould tools for production yachts.Bring it on I say - my basic home DIY 3d printer is frankly phenomenal and far better than anticipated. I am pretty sure if I change the nozzle I can print out carbon fibre reinforced end products so a far shout from plastic fantastics.
I can see a real market for custom 3d printed boats; each one tailored to the end buyers needs. Work with a boat designer / or do it yourself to tweak your ideal boat; whether it's longer / wider bunks, higher headroom, flush deck, lifting keel, pilot house, where the heads is located... The posibilities are endless. One you're happy with the result, send it off to a printers' and you have the completed hull, deck and interior delivered in a fortnight so you can hang your curtains, step the mast and off you go!
The printer wouldn’t need to just do the hull though - it could build the whole hull / bulkhead / interior / chainplates / mast step as it goes in a carbon composite. Completely monocoque and stiff.I can see it working in the niche workboat type stuff but it doesn't make sense to me for production boats - laying up the hull isn't particularly slow is it? fitting it out, internal furnishing, rigging etc all take longer. It would be interesting to see how the weight compares - rotomolded HDPE boats are heavier than GRP equivalents - perhaps clever "infill" can achieve weight reduction. GRP layup is a lot more technical that just slapping glass and resin in a mould these days - you use particular weave of fibre in high stress areas to distribute loads, achieve stiffness etc without adding weight. You possibly can do that with 3D printed braces etc but you need real engineers involved. But I could see it being used to make the original mould tools for production yachts.
Every variation on design is going to need RCD work to stop people doing stupid stuff.
The problem though is that 3d printing (as far as I know) can’t put sheets down, its point by point. Stress analysis will put down more material but could it lay biaxial cloth?Most decent 3d CAD software these days has 3d strain analysis based on the material used- it’d be trivial to get the layup just so to spread the loads.