The Gear Patrol Podcast is our weekly roundtable discussion focused on products, their stories, and the culture surrounding them. A Silicon Valley startup called Carbon has introduced the next 3D ...
Certainly! Here's the revised description with all links and additional text removed: --- Mingda Magician Pro2 | Unleash Your 3D Printing Potential! Experience the next level of precision and ...
Onetime Microsoft executive Jonathan Roberts knows that not all 3D-printed personal protective equipment being produced for the nation’s coronavirus response is created equal. “It sends a signal to ...
Anyone who has ever snapped a chain or a crank knows how much torque a bicycle’s power train has to absorb on a daily basis; it’s really more than one might naively expect. For that reason, [Well Done ...
You don’t have to be able to follow the intricately complex plot threads of HBO’s hit sci-fi series Westworld — who can? — to see the hypothetical picture in its fabric: by the early 2050s, theme park ...
While 3D printing is likely never going to be able to produce fenders fast enough for high-volume production, at least one type of the technology — binder jet printing — is making big strides in the ...
A Luxembourg initiative was created to seek manufacturing companies and private persons that could contribute to the production of components used in face shields for medical personnel during the ...
A giant, high-speed 3D printer is producing large, ultra-strong steel components and weapons for the US Army. It may also have non-military uses. The prototype printer, commissioned from 3D Systems in ...
Transmissions, especially automatic transmissions, can be a little bit difficult to understand sometimes. There are valve bodies, brand brakes, selector forks—it’s all a bunch of jargon that often ...
Worm gears are great if you have a low-speed, high-torque application in which you don’t need to backdrive. [Let’s Print] decided to see if they could print their own worm gear drives that would ...
U.S. Air Force Staff. Sgt. Maximilion Estrada, the Phoenix Spark noncommissioned officer in charge of agile manufacturing, assembles a face shield April 6, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, Calif.
SEATTLE – Onetime Microsoft executive Jonathan Roberts knows that not all 3D-printed personal protective equipment being produced for the nation’s coronavirus response is created equal. The past few ...