World’s First Three-Dimensional Printed Car Made in Chicago
An Arizona company is the first to use 3-D printing to make a carSep 12, 2014 | Julia Pyper and ClimateWire
Layer by layer, inch my inch, the world’s first 3-D printed vehicle seemingly emerged from thin air this week on the floor of the International Manufacturing Technology Show in Chicago.
The Strati, named after the Italian word for layer, was printed in one piece over 44 hours using a process called direct digital manufacturing—the seamless fabrication of components from computer design to physical object. This is the first time this method has been used to make a car, one that also happens to be fully electric.
Mechanical components of the vehicle, including the battery, motor and suspension, were obtained from various sources, such as Renault’s urban electric car Twizy. A team of engineers will rapidly assemble the final parts of the vehicle today and, if all goes well, will take it on a historic first test drive tomorrow.
Is this step one for replicators?
Where’s Roddenberry when you need him…?
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Cloning . . .
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Lots of places for things to go wrong.
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Default programming for all printables . . .
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De fault of de programming?
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De fault of de programming?
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Default programming for all printables . . .
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Lots of places for things to go wrong.
- Do we have 3D printers that can make 3D printers?