3D Printed Car
It's an emerging
technology that is an
alternative to the traditional tooling
and machining processes used in
manufacturing.
At the International Manufacturing
Technology Show in Chicago, a
little
known
Arizona-based car maker
created a media
sensation by manufacturing a
car at the
show.
It was a full scale, fully functional
car that was 3d printed in
44 hours and assembled in
2 days. The video below shows the
car being made.
The car is called a
"Strati", Italian for
layers, so named by
it's automotive designer
Michele Anoè because the
entire structure of the car is
made from layers
of acrylonitrile butadiene styrene
(A.B.S.) with reinforced
carbon fiber into a single unit.
The average car has more than
20,000 parts but this latest
technology reduces the
number of parts to 40
including all the
mechanical components.
“The goal here is to get the number of parts down, and
to drop the tooling costs to almost zero.” said John B.
Rogers Jr., chief executive of Local Motors, a Princeton
and Harvard-educated U.S. Marine.
“Cars are
ridiculously complex,“ he added, referring to
the thousands of bits
and pieces that are sourced, assembled and
connected to make a vehicle.
"It's potentially a huge deal," said Jay Baron, president of
the Center for Automotive Research, noting that the
material science and technology
used by Local Motors is derived from
their partnership with
the U.S. Department of Energy’s Manufacturing
Demonstration Facility
at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Oak
Ridge,Tennessee.
This
technology can use a variety of
metal, plastic or
composite materials to manufacture
anything in
intricate detail.
People tend to want what they want, when they want it,
where they want it, and how they want it, which makes
this technology disruptive in the same
way digital technologies
used by companies like
Amazon and Apple disrupted
newspaper, book
and music publishers.
Imagine if you could customize and
personalize your new car online and pick it
up or have it delivered to you the next
day at a fraction of the cost of buying
one from a dealership?
What if you could make
a fender
for a Porsche, or a tail light for a
Honda, for
a fraction of the cost of buying from
a parts supplier? How revolutionary would that be for
the automotive
industry?
It's already happening.
- See more at: http://www.inventor-strategies.com/Latest-technology-inventions.html#sthash.VnZ2wdzW.dpuf
3D Printed Car
It's an emerging
technology that is an
alternative to the traditional tooling
and machining processes used in
manufacturing.
At the International Manufacturing
Technology Show in Chicago, a
little
known
Arizona-based car maker
created a media
sensation by manufacturing a
car at the
show.
It was a full scale, fully functional
car that was 3d printed in
44 hours and assembled in
2 days. The video below shows the
car being made.
The car is called a
"Strati", Italian for
layers, so named by
it's automotive designer
Michele Anoè because the
entire structure of the car is
made from layers
of acrylonitrile butadiene styrene
(A.B.S.) with reinforced
carbon fiber into a single unit.
The average car has more than
20,000 parts but this latest
technology reduces the
number of parts to 40
including all the
mechanical components.
“The goal here is to get the number of parts down, and
to drop the tooling costs to almost zero.” said John B.
Rogers Jr., chief executive of Local Motors, a Princeton
and Harvard-educated U.S. Marine.
“Cars are
ridiculously complex,“ he added, referring to
the thousands of bits
and pieces that are sourced, assembled and
connected to make a vehicle.
"It's potentially a huge deal," said Jay Baron, president of
the Center for Automotive Research, noting that the
material science and technology
used by Local Motors is derived from
their partnership with
the U.S. Department of Energy’s Manufacturing
Demonstration Facility
at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Oak
Ridge,Tennessee.
This
technology can use a variety of
metal, plastic or
composite materials to manufacture
anything in
intricate detail.
People tend to want what they want, when they want it,
where they want it, and how they want it, which makes
this technology disruptive in the same
way digital technologies
used by companies like
Amazon and Apple disrupted
newspaper, book
and music publishers.
Imagine if you could customize and
personalize your new car online and pick it
up or have it delivered to you the next
day at a fraction of the cost of buying
one from a dealership?
What if you could make
a fender
for a Porsche, or a tail light for a
Honda, for
a fraction of the cost of buying from
a parts supplier? How revolutionary would that be for
the automotive
industry?
It's already happening.
- See more at: http://www.inventor-strategies.com/Latest-technology-inventions.html#sthash.VnZ2wdzW.dpuf
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