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The Wonder of 3D Printing. Kaizen The first industrial revolution “began in Britain in the late 18th century, with the mechanisation of the textile industry.

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Presentation on theme: "The Wonder of 3D Printing. Kaizen The first industrial revolution “began in Britain in the late 18th century, with the mechanisation of the textile industry."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Wonder of 3D Printing

2 Kaizen The first industrial revolution “began in Britain in the late 18th century, with the mechanisation of the textile industry. Source: http://www.kish.in/the_industrial_revolution/http://www.kish.in/the_industrial_revolution/ First Industrial Revolution

3 The “second industrial revolution came in the early 20th century, when Henry Ford mastered the moving assembly line and ushered in the age of mass production.” The third revolution “is under way” and that consists of manufacturing “going digital.” Second Industrial Revolution

4 Source: (http://silodrome.com/ford-model-t-assembly-line/ )http://silodrome.com/ford-model-t-assembly-line/

5 Any customer can have a car painted any colour that he wants so long as it is black.Remark about the Model T in 1909, published in his autobiography My Life and Work (1922) Chapter IV, p. 71; this has often become presented in paraphrased forms such as: "You can have any color as long as it's black."Model TMy Life and Work (1922) “Any Customer can have a car painted any colour that he wants so long as it is black” Henry Ford’s Remark on the Model T, 1909

6 Next Industrial Revolution The third revolution “is under way” and that consists of manufacturing “going digital.”

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9 AdditiveSubtractive Manufacturing

10 Subtractive Manufacturing – Milling – Turning – Drilling – Computer Numerical Control (CNC) Machine

11 What is 3D Printing? is a form of Additive Manufacturing – Process of joining materials to make an object from 3D model Data; layer-by-layer process

12 What is 3D Printing? Digital Fabrication - it takes a model └a digital design └turn into real, physical Object

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14 Type of Additive Manufacturing SLS (Selective Laser Sintering) FDM (Fused Deposition Modeling) SLA (Sterolithography) DLP (Digital Light Processing)

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18 How 3D Printing Can Change the World?

19 How 3D Printing Can Change the world? Medical procedures Advances in research Product prototyping Historic Preservation Architectural Engineering Construction Advanced Manufacturing Food Industries Automotive Accessories

20 Adopted 3D printing as a way to increase innovation Reduce costs and speed up the process. 3D models of buildings can be easily created and edited as plans develop – something that used to take a significant amount of time to make. AEC

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22 Airbus would like to make a 3D printer that is large enough to make planes from the ground up – a hangar-size printer as large as 80m x 80m.a hangar-size printer Made In Space is a US company experimenting with zero- gravity 3D printing. The process could potentially allow astronauts to print objects as required in space, saving valuable weight at launch.Made In Space NASA has been looking at 3D printing for some time now, and considering the technology for long missions where astronauts could create their own equipment during the trip.NASA has been looking at 3D printing Advanced Manufacturing

23 Medical Procedures Custom hearing aids and braces. Body parts, including ears, hips and even organs, in exact proportions to fit the patient. In February 2012, surgeons successfully implanted an entire titanium jaw, made with 3D printing, in an elderly woman. implanted an entire titanium jaw

24 Medical Procedures http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WoZ2BgPVtA0&feature=player_embedded http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9VHFlwJQIkE

25 http://www.bespokeinnovations.com/content/gallery

26 Accessories Source : www.shapeways.comwww.shapeways.com

27 RepRap Project Started in 2005 by Dr Adrian Bowyer Develop an open source self-replicating 3D printer Short for Replicating Rapid Prototype General Public License (GPL) Source from Wikipedia

28 RepRap Project RepRap Version 1.0 (Darwin) RepRap Version 2.0 (Mendel) Source from Wikipedia

29 3D Printer Easy to Use Economical to Own ones. Can be Operate in a Office, lab, Homes, etc. Equipping students with skills for the future Affordably Price takes digital input from 3D data and creates solid, 3D parts used extensively by designers, engineers and hobbyists for concept development and product design objects such as fittings, crafts, jewellery and many others.

30 The Unattainable Triangle Speed Price Quality

31 Makerbot Industries Cupcake Early 2009 Thing-O-Matic Late 2010

32 Replicator Replicator 2

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36 Replicator 2x http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WT3772yhr0o&feature=youtu.be

37 UP! 3D Printer Ultimaker

38 Rapman BFBTouch

39 Felix 3D Printer

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41 Form 1

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48 Student Project

49 thing:8194 thing: 58371 www.thingiverse.com

50 How to Use the 3D Printer? Create a CAD Model Prepare important features Save the model into a STL (STereoLithography) file

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53 Behind the “Scene”

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58 EEET 2044 Electro-mechanics EEET 4070 Autonomous Mechatronic Systems COMP 1041 Programming for Engineers

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60 Nokia Lumia 820 Case

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62 DESIGN TIPS

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66 Questions? (http://www.flickr.com/photos/makerbot/5532451580/in/photostream)


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