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3D Printing With Metal: Engineers Create DIY Welding 3D Printer For Under $1,500
International Business Times ^ | December 2, 2013 | Roxanne Palmer

Posted on 12/03/2013 2:07:25 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet

Currently, the commercial 3D printing landscape is dominated by contraptions that create everything from toys to watchbands out of plastic. But there’s another manufacturing revolution in the making: metal 3D printing.

Big companies like Rolls-Royce and GE are already working on using 3D printing to make metal parts for jet engines, but their machines have a startup cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars – not exactly within reach for the garage hobbyist. Now, engineers from Michigan Technological University in Houghton have rigged up their version of a 3D metal printer that can be made with less than $1,500 of materials and some open-source software. They outline their process – and include plans and a shopping list – in a paper appearing in the journal IEEE Access.

The primary ingredient in the metal printer is a small commercial MIG welder, which uses a special wire to maintain an electric current that heats metals and joins them together. The team also used an open-source 3D printer schematic derived from the plastic RepRap printer.

“Anyone that has more or less any kind of welding system can build our version of a 3D printer and get off to the races,” MTU engineer Joshua Pearce said in a phone interview.

Their metal printer creates objects from layers of steel wire, heated and extruded through a nozzle.

“We can [make] any 3D object that could fit in a breadbox,” Pearce says – with the caveat that the object cannot have any vertical holes running through it, because of how the welding machine works.

This isn’t the first venture to meld metal and 3D printing. Another 3D printer, the Mini Metal Maker, can be used to make small custom metal pieces, like jewelry, and will set you back just $750 (unassembled) or $1,000 (assembled). Instead of wire, this model prints with a blend of metal and clay. The piece is fired in a kiln afterwards, removing binders and water, and leaving behind the metal. Mini Metal Maker has raised more than $21,000 so far on the crowdfunding website Indiegogo, and expects to start shipping printer kits to backers in September 2014.

In contrast, the do-it-yourself model that Pearce and colleagues have put together is more suited to making machine parts for a metal shop or a garage – some place with extensive fire protection equipment and safety gear. This 3D metal printer prototype isn’t something you want to have in the living room.

Pearce and his colleagues printed out a sprocket and other parts with their prototype, and are already thinking about how to improve the next version of the printer. They’re also testing out other kinds of metals besides steel. The only real limit with this model, besides imagination, is the thickness of the welding wire, which determines the minimum resolution of the object that the printer can make.

Given that people have already been able to create plastic guns with 3D printers, the advent of metal 3D printers will surely make it easier for people to fabricate guns and knives at home. But is that a good enough reason to stifle the development of metal 3D printing?

“I’ve thought a lot about this, and I’ve come to these conclusions: All technology can be used for good and bad things,” Pearce says. “You can absolutely use this to make any manner of weapon, but the potential good implications annihilate the bad ones.”

In the developing world, having access to custom metal fabrication could be transformative. People could get parts for pumps, or windmills, or other essential machines, without having to pay the premium in money and time while waiting for replacement parts to be shipped out. People could print out the sprockets, gears and other parts of a bicycle, and use local materials like bamboo to create the frame.

Pearce says he’s also excited about the potential that 3D metal printing affords for scientific research. If scientists have access to cheaper and more customizable tools, research can progress even faster.

“What that’ll do is accelerate everything,” he says.

SOURCE: Anzalone et al. “A Low-Cost Open-Source Metal 3-D Printer.” IEEE Access published 2 December 2013.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: 3dmetalprinting; 3dprinters; 3dprinting; banglist; fabrication; homemadeweapons; manufacturing; welding
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

It’s possible to use plain old sand as the building material in a 3D printer.

Heated and fused together into shapes with cavities, it can be extremely strong and lightweight.

Someday carbon fiber printing will be possible... resulting in the strongest objects ever created by man.


21 posted on 12/03/2013 3:31:53 PM PST by Bobalu (White Boy Think A Lot)
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To: Bobalu
"Someday carbon fiber printing will be possible... resulting in the strongest objects ever created by man."

I think they're already working on that.

22 posted on 12/03/2013 3:38:54 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet ("Of the 4 wars in my lifetime none came about because the US was too strong." Reagan)
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To: Hardraade

I’d rather be able to print Au,in rings bars and coins.


23 posted on 12/03/2013 3:43:29 PM PST by driftdiver (I could eat it raw, but why do that when I have a fire.)
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To: Sawdring

You had me at porterhouse and goat cheese.

I’m severing our relationship for the rest of it...


24 posted on 12/03/2013 4:04:30 PM PST by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously-you won't live through it anyway-Enjoy Yourself ala Louis Prima)
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To: 9YearLurker

I don’t think the size of a breadbox has changed, so I’m pretty sure the lower receiver of an AR-15 or AK-47, and pretty much any handgun will fit inside one.


25 posted on 12/03/2013 4:12:25 PM PST by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know...)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I wouldn’t want to be anywhere near the first jet turbine they test with internal 3d printed parts. It would be fun to watch though.


26 posted on 12/03/2013 4:14:59 PM PST by rottndog ('Live Free Or Die' Ain't just words on a bumber sticker...or a tagline.)
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To: driftdiver
I’d rather be able to print Au,in rings bars and coins.

Then load the welder with a 10# roll of AU wire, and you can print all you want. You might need to adjust the current and feed rate to match the melting point, but it should work just fine. You may vaporize a fair amount, however.

27 posted on 12/03/2013 4:25:18 PM PST by tpmintx (Gun free zones are hunting preserves for unarmed people.)
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To: The_Reader_David

I haven’t encountered a breadbox for decades, so I imagine we’ve a couple of generations who’ve never actually seen one.


28 posted on 12/03/2013 4:29:55 PM PST by 9YearLurker
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To: Sawdring
3D printed meat. 3D printed meat.
29 posted on 12/03/2013 4:56:20 PM PST by verga (The devil is in the details)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

ARRRRGGGGHHH!

Is the paper,
Anzalone et al.
“A Low-Cost Open-Source Metal 3-D Printer.” IEEE Access published 2 December 2013.

actually out there on the web?

If so, can any of you smarter and much better looking guys post a link to where the paper/plans are actually published?

I have exhausted my ferret like qualities and now lay spent across the keyboard. I can find lots of “closes”, but no cigar.


30 posted on 12/03/2013 5:13:27 PM PST by Lowell1775
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To: Hardraade

“Let me have a 3d-printer that can extract PU from air”

what is PU?


31 posted on 12/03/2013 5:23:00 PM PST by dalereed
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To: dalereed

Plutonium.

I can dream, can’t I? And if it’s dreamable, it’s possible :).


32 posted on 12/03/2013 5:28:14 PM PST by Hardraade (http://junipersec.wordpress.com/2013/10/04/nicolae-hussein-obama/)
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To: 9YearLurker

I actually have one. Somewhere in the stacks. Wood with rolltop.


33 posted on 12/03/2013 5:32:00 PM PST by Hardraade (http://junipersec.wordpress.com/2013/10/04/nicolae-hussein-obama/)
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To: Hardraade

I thought maybe you were using it for farts!


34 posted on 12/03/2013 5:34:12 PM PST by dalereed
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To: 2ndDivisionVet; AFPhys; AD from SpringBay; ADemocratNoMore; aimhigh; AnalogReigns; archy; ...

Political power grows out of the nozzle of a 3-D Printer.

35 posted on 12/03/2013 6:13:39 PM PST by null and void (I'm betting on an Obama Trifecta: A Nobel Peace Prize, an Impeachment, AND a War Crimes Trial...)
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To: dalereed

Mushroom farts. Cleverly placed in democrat gun-control strongholds!


36 posted on 12/03/2013 6:14:25 PM PST by Hardraade (http://junipersec.wordpress.com/2013/10/04/nicolae-hussein-obama/)
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To: Hardraade

If obama has his way Iran will provide plenty of atmospheric Pu to extract.


37 posted on 12/03/2013 6:17:37 PM PST by null and void (I'm betting on an Obama Trifecta: A Nobel Peace Prize, an Impeachment, AND a War Crimes Trial...)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
This 3D metal printer prototype isn’t something you want to have in the living room.

Roxanne doesn't know FReepers.

38 posted on 12/03/2013 6:34:46 PM PST by Moonman62 (The US has become a government with a country, rather than a country with a government.)
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To: Sawdring

... “Call me when they design a 3D priter that can make a medium porterhouse with encrusted blue cheese topping using goat feces, red clay and pond water.”

I was with you right up until ‘goat feces,’ FRiend.

;oP


39 posted on 12/04/2013 12:20:29 AM PST by Titan Magroyne (What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving.)
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To: mad_as_he$$
FWIW. MIG welders do NOT heat and extrude wire from the tip.

Forgive my ignorance, I'm not really a very skilled or experienced welder...but at the shop there is a welder they call a "MIG" welder and it has a spool of wire in it's innards. When I squeeze the trigger on the grip, wire comes out at the tip and is turned into molten metal along with part of my workpiece in a blazing display of electric power (especially if I'm not careful it burns holes in my workpiece or welds it to the table...).

What kind of welder izzat?

40 posted on 12/04/2013 9:31:02 AM PST by no-s (when democracy is displaced by tyranny, the armed citizen still gets to vote)
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