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3D Printing News Briefs, December 22, 2021: Business, Software, Rhinoplasty, & More https://ift.tt/33FG3ZM We’re starting off with two acquisitions in today’s 3D Printing News Briefs, and then on to a new Amazon e-commerce store for polypropylene filaments. Then we’ll discuss software, print orientation, and finish up with 3D printing for rhinoplasty surgery preparation. Read on for the details! Titomic Acquires Cold Spray Company Dycomet Australia-based Titomic (ASX: TTT) announced that it has acquired Dutch company Dycomet Europe B.V., a European leader in cold spray technology. Dycomet offers low, medium, and high pressure cold spray solutions to various industries, including automotive and aviation, which will give local capability and support to Titomic’s European customers. According to a press release, the acquisition will be “immediately revenue accretive for Titomic” with a strong pipeline of European customer orders, giving it a base in Europe, which, paired with its Australian headquarters and Titomic USA, will provide the company with excellent global access. Klaas Rozema, Dycomet’s Founder and CEO, will now serve as General Manager of Titomic Europe.
TriMech Acquires InterPRO Additive Manufacturing Group Speaking of acquisitions, TriMech, which provides CAD and engineering software, additive and subtractive manufacturing solutions, and associated training, consulting, and staffing to manufacturers and engineers in North America, is expanding its advanced manufacturing and rapid prototyping offering with the acquisition of InterPRO Additive Manufacturing Group. InterPRO has one of North America’s largest deployments of the new Stratasys Origin P3 system, and also offers in-house technologies including urethane and silicone casting and Multi Jet Fusion, FDM, and large-format SLA printing. With this acquisition, TriMech will add over 70 3D printers to its existing range of 40+ 3D printers at its manufacturing and prototyping facilities in Ontario and Connecticut. Dan Straka, President of InterPRO, will become TriMech’s General Manager of Advanced Manufacturing, and InterPRO will remain in its Connecticut facility under the name TriMech Advanced Manufacturing.
Braskem, Xenon arc Launch Amazon Store for PP Filaments Moving on to materials, Braskem, which is the largest producer of polyolefins in the Americas, partnered with Xenon arc to launch its first consumer-facing store on Amazon in order to make polypropylene AM filaments more accessible to consumers. Xenon arc is contributing data-driven marketing and sales platform technologies to help Braskem better reach its small- to mid-sized clients, and the e-commerce marketplace features Braskem’s PP 3D printing filaments in both 1.75 mm and 2.85 mm diameters, which can be used for designing spare parts, rapid prototyping, and custom product design, among other applications, thanks to the material’s impact strength, durability, and chemical resistance. The Amazon store will also sell Braskem’s award-winning carbon fiber reinforced PP filament.
Hexagon Adds Additive Build Preparation to ESPRIT CAM Software Quote request Are you looking to buy a 3D printer or 3D scanner? We're here to help. Get free expert advice and quotes from trusted suppliers in your area. Powered by Aniwaa Hexagon’s Manufacturing Intelligence division recently added additive build preparation to its ESPRIT CAM software, which will provide digital tools to prepare components for powder bed fusion (PBF) 3D printing in order to streamline hybrid manufacturing workflows and scale up AM production volumes. According to AMPOWER’s Additive Manufacturing Report, PBF represents 86% of the world’s machine install base for additive manufacturing, and with this addition, Hexagon’s ESPRIT CAM software now includes its patented Part-to-Build workflow for both the printing and finishing operations for PBF, including build preparation steps and programming tools for post-processing—offering this dedicated functionality in one piece of software that uses a parametric data-based workflow. Customers can better optimize their AM part designs by using ESPRIT Additive PBF along with other Hexagon products, like Simufact Additive and MSC Apex Generative Design.
Thermwood Adds Third Print Orientation to LSAM Systems In 2020, Thermwood Corp. introduced the Vertical Layer Print (VLP) option to its LSAM (Large Scale Additive Manufacturing) systems, which can print vertical layers; it already offered HLP, or Horizontal Layer Printing. Now the company has added a third print orientation with its new Angle Layer Printing (ALP) option, which can print at a 45° angle. Because each of these orientations has its own advantages, offering all three on the same system, with the complete LSAM print head, makes it an extremely flexible solution. Currently operating LSAM machines already feature the VLP capability, but for new systems, this has been replaced with a VLP/ALP option. If a customer purchased a machine without VLP, this new VLP/ALP option can be easily added to most of the machines already operating, and supposedly it’s an inexpensive fix as well. LSAM systems, which are said to be the most widely-used large-scale composite thermoplastic 3D printing systems currently in industrial production, are available in a variety of configurations, including full print and trim and print only, in sizes from 5 x 10 feet all the way to 15 x 60 feet. Using 3D Printed Models for Rhinoplasty Surgery Preparation Finally, researchers in Italy published a research paper on their use of CT scans, MRI data, and 3D printing to create pre-surgical models ahead of rhinoplasty surgery, and other surgical reconstruction of cartilaginous structures, which can be pretty challenging. The goal was to come up with an imaging strategy to merge the CT and MRI data in order to 3D print a model that is, as the researchers wrote, “true to the patient’s anatomy.” Ten patients who were candidates for rhinoplasty had CT scans and MRI for characterization of their nasal structures for this study; the bone and soft tissue segmentations took place in the CT, and the MRI captured the cartilage segmentations.
Printing via 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing https://3dprint.com December 22, 2021 at 07:09AM
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