Here’s an older but fantastic video that is as edifying as it is short. [Topias Korpi] demonstrates a 3D printed flexure with a dial indicator on one end, and an M3 screw on the other.
While the average person doesn't have access to all the machinery required to create most action figures, they can still 3D print their own. If you know where to look, you will find no shortage of ...
[Michal Jirků] found himself in a hotel room with a particularly large gap underneath the door, and decided to quickly design and print a door ... under-door attack in action, so you can see ...
WIRED is where tomorrow is realized. It is the essential source of information and ideas that make sense of a world in constant transformation. The WIRED conversation illuminates how technology is ...
It looks like any other 3D printer—except it’s the size of a crane and is, layer by layer, building a hotel in the Texan desert. El Cosmico, an existing hotel and campground on the outskirts ...
More affordable than ever, 3D printers are booming for personal, professional, and educational use. Here's everything to know before you buy one, along with the top models from our hands-on testing.
Rocket Lab is making innovative strides in space travel with the Neutron medium payload rocket – namely, it's the largest composite rocket ever made. Initially, hundreds of layers and thousands of ...
Carolyn Schwaar is a tech journalist and editor at All3DP Magazine. California-based 3D-printing construction tech company Mighty Buildings says it’s on a new and ambitious growth trajectory.
A giant 3D printer, which is big enough to make a house, has been unveiled at the University of Maine. The university says it has beaten its own record for the world's largest polymer 3D printer ...
3D food printing could also transform industrial-scale food manufacturing, according to Dr Vincenzo Di Bari, assistant professor in food structure and processing at Nottingham University. Instead ...
26 story has been corrected to say the area of expansion is 60 acres, not 40 acres, in paragraph 2) It looks like any other 3D printer - except it's the size of a crane and is, layer by layer ...