In 2024, the University of Maine unveiled the world’s largest 3D printer, which can print objects up to 29 meters long.
PCMag on MSN
Tariffs Are Making Everything More Expensive. Here's How I'm Using My Old 3D Printer to Offset the Cost
The 3D-printing hype ended years ago, but the threat of tariffs and the closing of the de minimis exemptions means that making your own stuff might actually hold some value.
The Apple Watch Ultra 3 has the most features of any Apple smartwatch, but you may not need to buy it if you want two of its ...
Slice of startup life: Seattle kitchen tech wizard creates ultrasonic knife for more effortless cuts
It's taken more than 2.5 million years to get from the earliest sharpened-stone version of a knife to what Scott Heimendinger ...
While it's unlikely to come to fruition, designs for the 2.4-billion-ton Chrysalis could see humanity embark on a ...
At 3D Printopia, the East Coast's largest 3D printing show, Tobin and Joel Telling, the 3D printing Nerd himself, announced ...
A new factory capable of 3D printing industrial-grade parts for the Navy could begin manufacturing items by the early part of ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
US scientists test heat-treated 3D-printed steels for next-gen nuclear reactors
The US researchers investigated nuclear reactor-grade steels made with a 3D printing process called laser powder bed fusion.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Australia's new robot 3D prints a home overnight; could build lunar bases one day
Named Charlotte, this robot was developed by the Australian companies Crest Robotics and Earthbuilt Technology.
Tech Xplore on MSN
Advanced sensors peer inside the 'black box' of metal 3D printing
With the ability to print metal structures with complex shapes and unique mechanical properties, metal additive manufacturing ...
After being stalled out for years, the 30-year-old Chamisa Verde affordable housing development off Paseo del Cañon is moving ...
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