MIT Media Lab Researcher Prints Playable Flute
What if making an acoustic instrument was a matter of hitting 'print'? MIT Media Lab researcher Amit Zoran did just that. He created a flute using the Objet Geometries Connex500 3D printer. The instrument is playable and the results are surprisingly good for a first attempt. As an aside, rumour has it that Amit has a bumper sticker that reads: My other printer prints food.
It's not really for home use yet, but you can have your stuff printed relatively cheaply (not yet printer ink "cheaply", but yeah) at some places. For example, see i.Materialise for an online printing service. ;-), I've seen a lot of 3D printing stuff. This flute thing doesn't impress me that much - this folding chair is much cooler.
Disclaimer: I work for a sister company
I just did a quick search and there's a manufacturer selling a desktop 3D printer for $10,000. It uses a different process in the build; more like laying clear tape and cutting it at each layer to produce a model. The next cheapest I could find used the more traditional "goop" like resin and was $15,000. The last time I checked prices about two years ago and they were hovering around $30,000. At this rate you'll probably see models in the $1500-3000 range in about 3-7 years.
The question then is, what do you build with it?
900£ anyone?
http://www.bitsfrombytes.com/
Yeah there are way too many cheap/DIY options to be spending the cost of a car on a 3D printer for home use.
I particularly like this one:
http://hacknmod.com/hack/diy-high-resolution-3d-printer/
(the source page is currently offline for maintenance)
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
The next model that 3D systems offers, the ProJet, seems to have vastly better accuracy and stability during cure.
We build prototype cellphone cases, speaker cases, outlet switch boxes, light bulb reflector backing structures, to make sure everything fits mechanically and looks good, and then go to plastic injection molding companies to have the production runs done. We found that a single mistake on an injection molding die cost about as much as the V-flash. And meanwhile the two gamers at work are running off about a zillion RPG miniatures on the machine.
Nostalgia's not what it used to be.