Three-dimensional printers make manufacturing possible at home. Could they spell the end of mass production?
What is 3-D printing?
It’s
a revolutionary manufacturing process in which the design for physical
objects, from toys to jewelry to machine parts, can be digitally
transmitted to a device that makes them out of plastic, metal, or
ceramic materials. Once the stuff of science fiction, 3-D printers
have rapidly evolved in recent years, becoming smaller, faster, and
cheaper. A basic, microwave-size 3-D printer costs less than $1,000,
making almost anyone a potential manufacturer. Tonight Show host Jay
Leno uses a $30,000 device to print hard-to-find parts for his
collection of classic cars. “It’s a bit like when I was a kid and I
watched The Jetsons and they’d walk up to a machine and press a button
and get a steak dinner,” Leno said. “But instead of a steak dinner,
you’re getting an old car part.”
How do 3-D printers work?
Just as a traditional ink-jet printer sprays ink onto a page line by line, modern 3-D
devices deposit material onto a surface layer by layer, slowly building
up a shape. The process begins with a designer using computer software
to create a virtual 3-D model of an object, such as a toy car. Another
program slices that model into thin horizontal sections and instructs
the printer to lay down an exact replica of each slice. Some printers
use a computer-controlled heated nozzle that moves back and forth across
a print platform, setting down a layer of melted material. Others use a
laser or electron beam to fuse powdered plastic or metal into the
required shape. After each layer is completed, the printing platform is
lowered by a fraction of a millimeter and the next layer is added, until
the object is completed.
What’s the advantage of this technology?
It
makes it easier and cheaper for ordinary people to get into the
business of making things. Inventors can print a model of their latest
creation in a few hours, then tweak it and print again, instead of
waiting weeks for a prototype to emerge from a factory. Injection
molding, which requires toolmakers to build metal casts into which
heated plastic is poured, is only cost-efficient for large-scale
production. With 3-D printing, the cost per unit stays the same whether
you manufacture one part or one million. “I can cost-effectively make a
cellphone cover that is unique to every customer,” said Ryan Wicker, an
engineer at the University of Texas at El Paso. “I could build 100
different ones just as cost-effectively as building them all the same.”
What are people printing now?
MyRobotNation.com
lets customers design their own toy robot, which is manufactured on a
3-D printer, and the online retailer Shapeways.com sells everything from
printed jewelry to desk toys. But the technology isn’t being used just
to build novelties. Danish firm Widex prints hearing aids perfectly
tailored to the wearer’s ear canal, and San Francisco’s Bespoke
Innovations is experimenting with printing custom-fitted prosthetic
limbs. Aerospace firms like Boeing and EADS are starting to print
complex aircraft parts in single pieces rather than multiple sections.
By doing away with bolts and screws that previously held components
together, 3-D printing has reduced the weight of certain parts by up to
30 percent, saving fuel costs, said Boeing design engineer Michael
Hayes. Eventually, Boeing thinks it might be able to print an entire
aircraft wing. “That’s where the industry is trying to go,” said Hayes.
What more could 3-D printing do?
A
possible next step is for virtually every home to have its own printer.
“Once that happens, it will change everything,” said Carl Bass, CEO of
Autodesk, which makes imaging software used by designers, architects,
and engineers. “See something on Amazon you like? Instead of placing an
order and waiting 24 hours for your FedEx package, just hit print and
get it in minutes.” Most experts, though, think the Jetsons era remains
far off. The desktop 3-D printers available on the market now can only
extrude plastic, limiting the objects they can produce. And even if you
owned an advanced machine capable of creating whatever you wanted, you’d
need a large stockpile of different materials. If your microwave breaks
and you want to print a replacement part, “what are the chances that
your 3-D printer is going to have the right material?” said industry
analyst Terry Wohlers.
How might people use 3-D printers in the future?
Instead
of fiddling around at home, we’re likely to turn to manufacturing hubs
with specialist 3-D printing machines, “rather like when people go to
specialist shops to get higher quality photos printed,” said Richard
Hague, an expert on 3-D printing at Loughborough University in the U.K.
Once introduced on an industrial scale, 3-D printing could have a
profound economic impact. Companies would no longer need to keep huge
warehouses filled with goods, as products could be printed locally on
demand. And 3-D printing could compel American manufacturers to
repatriate production now done abroad. “There is nothing to be gained by
going overseas,” said Bespoke Innovations co-founder Scott Summit,
“except for higher shipping charges.”
Download, print, aim, fire
Forget
background checks and waiting periods. If you have a 3-D printer, you
might soon be able to build a gun in your own home. That’s the goal of a
group called Defense Distributed, which wants to create downloadable
blueprints anyone could use to print a fully functioning firearm.
They’re not there yet, but late last year the project’s leader,
University of Texas law student Cody Wilson, announced that the group
had successfully fired six shots from a semiautomatic AR-15 rifle built
with several printed plastic parts. The gun then fell apart. Rep. Steve
Israel (D-N.Y.) is urging Congress to renew the Undetectable Firearms
Act—which bans the production of guns that don’t show up on metal
detectors—before it expires at the end of 2013. “When the [act] was last
renewed in 2003, a gun made by a 3-D printer was like a Star Trek
episode,” he said. “But now we know it’s real.”
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