Top industry thought leaders on the opportunities and challenges ahead for business and industrial 3D printing.
The 2020 Purmundus Challenge recognizes innovation with a nod to sustainable materials.
Top industrial design firms worldwide depend on 3D printing to test ideas, refine designs, and get product concepts to clients faster. Here’s how they do it.
Despite ongoing advances in metal 3D printing technology, it continues to suffer from process reliability and productivity problems. Higher quality metal material may be a key part of solving this problem.
Forecast 3D was already a successful 3D printing service with clients ranging from aerospace giants to well known designers, but when it shifted to printing PPE during the pandemic, the healthcare industry realized what others already knew: 3D printing makes manufacturing products faster and removes complexity.
The Terran 1 3D printed rocket will launch a Lockheed Martin in-orbit refueling demonstration in late 2023 as part of NASA research.
In the 2020 racing season, four of Chevrolet Motorsports race teams drove more than 80,000 miles of competition in vehicles with dozens of 3D-printed parts.
Beautiful and functional product prototypes aren’t just for big-budget design firms anymore. New 3D printing technology puts great-looking prototypes – and quick and cheap design iterations – within reach for practically any professional.
Someday soon, all hospitals may have 3D printing units capable of making patient-specific three-dimensional models and tools essential for diagnosis, treatment, patient education, surgical planning, and in-OR guidance.
Not satisfied with off-the-shelf solutions, Pozzetta Products decided to make its own ESD-safe filament and turn a fleet of Craftbot 3D printers into a production factory.
Affordable, versatile resin 3D printers let research engineers experiment on printed prototypes that look and act more like a final product.
Two innovative Swedish companies – one in jewelry design and one in metal 3D printing – collaborate to push the boundaries of 3D-printed wearable art. Take a look at this Digital Metal case study to learn more.
How one automotive parts company invested in 3D printing to solve a tool problem and ended up saving 70% of costs and transforming their operation.
How are the BigRep PRO and other large-scale FDM 3D printers being used for professional applications? Check our list of business use cases.
Dutch 3D printer manufacturer FELIXprinters has officially launched its FELIX BIOprinter.
0 to 62 mph in 1.9 seconds. 1,250 horsepower. This partially 3D printed hypercar is one of the fastest cars ever made.
Ikea is well-known as a manufacturer of cheap flat-pack furniture. However, finding Ikea replacement parts can be a pain. Follow along as we show you how to use a 3D printer to solve your furniture fixing woes.
Optimizing the concrete need while keeping up with stress requirements, Dutch company Vertico unwraps 3D printing's potential in the construction industry.
The European Space Agency is working on a project to 3D print living tissue for uses in space exploration. So far, it's used bio-printing to create bone and skin samples which could be recreated in a low-gravity environment.
VW, the German automotive manufacturer, has trained Artificial Intelligence to change how car components are made and is manufacturing the resulting parts using 3D printers.