Posted on 12/24/2013 5:29:52 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
(SLIDESHOW-AT-LINK)
When college student Shai Schechter didn't have access to an affordable 3D printer on his SUNY Purchase campus in New York, he set out to build his own model one that would still crank out 3D-printed objects, but at a much lower cost.
"We have a laser- and powder-based 3D printer at school, but it costs about $500 for a bucket of powder and that only lasts for about one or two prints," Schechter said. "It's never used because it is so expensive and classes werent offered that much in the curriculum."
He approached his sculpture professor about building a new 3D printer that uses plastic instead, and sought the help of three good friends.
Schecter and his business partners launched a Kickstarter campaign to bring their low-cost design to the masses; the project nearly sold out of preorders in the first week alone. While a new MakerBot 3D printer costs $2,000, the Deltraprintr is significantly less: $475 unassembled or $685 assembled for the large size (2 feet high). It's also available in extra large (2.5 feet), which has a doubled printing capacity, two more inches in diameter and six more inches in height, for a price of $705.
(VIDEO-AT-LINK)
"We are targeting educational institutions first, so people can learn how to assemble them," Schecter said. "When you buy a MakerBot, and you read a manual about how to use it, you don't learn a lot about how the printer and technology works. This is why we are offering the assembly manual on Kickstarter, too we want people to really get their hands on it."
The Deltaprintr uses three stepper motors, located under the acrylic platform where the objects are printed. Motors control the carriages that move the hot end and ultimately create the 3D-printed objects. Since a Deltaprintr design doesn't rqeuire as many parts as other 3D printers, the savings are passed on to consumers.
"MakerBot uses belts to move the print head, but ours uses a fishing line," Schechter said. "With the fishing line, you can expand it to make it taller if you want by changing the aluminum rods. It allows it to go faster than the MakerBot and is more accurate."
Although the Deltaprintr team is focusing on getting the product off the ground as an educational tool, it's eying the mass market, too.
"We want it to have a place in education, but it's still for the everyday user," Schechter said. "We have a lot of ideas that we plan to execute in the next year to make the Deltaprintr even better and lower the cost even more."
(GUN-VIDEO-AT-LINK)
Where’s the obligatory other picture?
What? You complain because I use it, then complain because I don’t????
Harumpf harumpf...
Ta Da!
Can it make golf balls? I think there’s a pretty good market there... :)
/johnny
Amazing!
LOL / Thanks for the laugh.
What happens when the printer’s figure out they can create themselves?
This:
Then this.
He should have gone to LeTourneau University, where every mechanical engineering student builds a 3D printer during a first semester lab course, and keeps the printer at the end of the semester. Granted the LeTourneau 3D printers are limited to 50 cm parts or smaller, but beggars can’t be choosers.
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