The Gear Patrol Podcast is our weekly roundtable discussion focused on products, their stories, and the culture surrounding them. A Silicon Valley startup called Carbon has introduced the next 3D ...
(Nanowerk News) 3D-printed microscopic particles, so small that to the naked eye they look like dust, have applications in drug and vaccine delivery, microelectronics, microfluidics, and abrasives for ...
Redditor [No-Championship-8520] aka [Eric Potempa] has come up with an interesting DIY take on the Continuous Liquid Interface Production (CLIP) process currently owned and developed by Carbon Inc.
Stanford's latest breakthrough in 3D printing technology enables the production of one million dust-sized particles per day. While 3D printing has gained widespread adoption on a macroscale level, ...
Advancements in 3D printing have made it easier for designers and engineers to customize projects, create physical prototypes at different scales, and produce structures that can’t be made with more ...
This image shows the Eiffel Tower emerging from resin pool using Continuous Liquid Interface Production (CLIP) methodology for printing monolithic objects continuously. (This is a variation on the ...
The new technique does have a few familiar features. The use of light to solidify polymers isn’t new. Dentists have been using it for years. The very high efficiency creation of a 3D solid in liquid, ...
3D printing breakthroughs have made it possible for engineers and designers to personalize projects, create physical prototypes at various scales, and build structures that were previously impossible ...
Anyone who has done any amount of 3D printing with SLA printers is probably well aware of the peeling step with each layer. This involves the newly printed layer being pulled away from the FEP film ...