Showing posts with label 3D. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 3D. Show all posts

Thursday, 30 March 2017

Get ready to coat the future of manufacturing production


Monday, 11 April 2016

3D PRINTING BETWEEN MYTH AND REALITY: how are the implications for finishing?


3D printing is one of the fashio­nable “technologies” and accor­ding to many it will fundamen­tally change the way we produce.
The futurologists speculate a scena­rio where traditional factories will di­sappear, swept by a wave of a wide­spread” electronically craft”, able to manufacture small batches (ideally 1 item) of customized products accor­ding to customer requirements.
Someone will remind when in 2000, with the internet spread, we said that traditional stores would disappear.... It did not happen, but the world of bu­siness is still fundamentally changed.
In this article we will try to under­stand the possible implications for manufacturing, and then for fini­shing, starting with the understan­ding of the technology and clarifying some of the words that are beco­ming fashionable.

3D PRINTING
3D printing, refers to various pro­cesses used to create an object by adding successive layers of material
We can see two kind of printing:
  • Extrusion or material deposition: various layers are created and depo­sited one after the other to “create” the object.
  • For sintering or hardening of mate­rial: in this case, usually with a laser, the object is drawn within paints or powder coating which are hardened by the laser.

In both cases the object is created through layers, as if we would build a mountain adding one section above the other corresponding to the con­tour lines.

The printer receives as input a 3D model of the object to create, re­presented according to a standard language - there are more than one - and it is able to decode the informa­tion into movement instructions for its moving parts, exactly like a paper printer is able to move its head to print a file from a computer.
Let’s see the benefits - typical of the digital transformation of any process – compared to the “traditional” pro­duction:
  • Flexibility and cost-effectiveness in particular for small batches: tools and moulds are not required.
  • Despecialization: the 3D printer replaces several equipment and traditional processes. For example in a single operation we can create complex shapes which would requi­re material removal after casting or moulding, or even the production of many parts to be assembled.
  • Zero or minimum setup time or however minimal: just load the 3D model of the object, and you can start.
  • Scalability: with less than 1000 Euros now it is possi­ble to buy home printers for plastic, to create industrial models
  • Possibility to create complex objects larger than the printer, dividing them into many parts to be produced on the same printer. Usually the design software supports the division in parts from the finished product

As regards the materials, the most use one is plastic and to follow metal. Then there are applications still on test for wood, food (for example printing of chocolate pra­lines), the electronic circuits, and even the molecules, with achievements in biotechnology or nanotechnology sectors.
The fields of application are extremely various: some are very specialized, such as the prosthetics sectors, with already a good spread in the dental industry, but also in cardiology or artificial limbs sector. Jewellery, and in particular furniture and home accessories industry.
We can even mention buildings created with printers for concrete (opening picture). And of course the industry at large, which we will talk about later.
I would like to end this brief overview on the technology with some considerations.
The first is that it is a rapidly evolving technology. I do not exclude that in a few months there will be innova­tions that overcome the considerations reported in this article. It is hard to draw conclusions, because we are “photographing” an evolving situation.
The second is that technology, even we can imagine ex­tremely interesting application areas, and it is still rather “primitive.”
Chris Anderson, in the book “Makers” to which I refer those who want to know more about this topic, draws a parallel with the traditional desktop printing: today we have at home, for a few hundred Euros, laser printers with photo-quality level; but do you remember the mid- 80’s dot matrix printers?
So we can think that riding on what we call the ‘long wa­ves of innovation, in thirty years or maybe earlier some of the applications, that today are only feasible, will be­come possible. Therefore it is important to distinguish the myths from reality.

Thursday, 11 February 2016

Innovation and new technologies in Euromask’s service: samples in 3 days!




As known, since 20 years Euromask is a leader in production
and trade of professional masking systems for every surface treatments: from liquid to powder coatings, from galvanic to sandblasting processes, masking tapes, silicone and rubber plugs, caps protections and hanging hooks.
In fact, Euromask is always in the forefront developing new technologies and productive/management processes in order to provide the best service to its customers, trying to improve and evolve itself as market require, right as a leader does.
That’s why with pride, Euromask is announcing the power to provide hanging hooks and mold samples for every appliance within record time!
Thanks to the new hook-machine for steel wires from 1,5 to 5 mm, Euromask will be able to dispatch huge quantity of hooks within 6 working days. In this way Euromask triples its daily output and is able to supply the growing demand of hooks, maintaining its “first-in, first-out” method.
But… that’s far from enough!
As a matter of fact, thanks to a new evolutionary step, Euromask developed a new technology in order to create and produce custom silicone samples suitable for many applications, high temperature and chemical bath processes included.
What to do? Simply provide a technical drawing or a physical sample of the part that needs to be masked. Than, Euromask’s experts will create a 3D drawing needful to produce a customer’s preliminary test silicone sample within record times: from 3 to 5 working day that depends on the complexity of the final object. This is a real improve, compared to the average timing of the market!
Moreover, the most important aspect is that once the sample is accepted by the customer, it will be perfectly the same in dimensions and features to the future product range.
In summary, Euromask shows once more its market leadership and won’t stops to challenge itself, in order to improve its own quality and its services for all customers.