Fortune 500 Equipment Supplier Adds Capacity for Middle East Maintenance Operations
Fortune 500 Equipment Supplier Adds Capacity for Middle East Maintenance Operations
Two-and-a-half years after a fire broke out at market-leading chemical etching manufacturer Precision Micro’s Birmingham site in Autumn 2019, the company has reached the end of a major £5.1 million refurbishment
Civan’s OPA 6 Weld, an entirely new class of laser that modulates beam shape at MHz rates without any moving parts, has received the 2022 Prism Award for Industrial Lasers.
The new generation of groundbreaking 3D printers brings faster printing, larger build volume and new capabilities to the Carbon Digital Light Synthesis™ (DLS) platform.
The new groundbreaking 3D printers provide up to 2.5x throughput improvements for dental models compared to previous generations saving both time and money
Controlling a dynamic beam laser with galvo scanner enables on-the-fly beam shape orientation changes, delivering new welding and laser powder bed fusion capabilities
Photocentric, inventor of LCD-based 3D printing, has teamed up with Mechnano to produce a nanoengineered resin providing electrostatic discharge (ESD) properties ideally suited to electronics manufacturing. Paired with Photocentric’s 3D printing expertise, the solution is perfect for the additive manufacturing of parts such as IC Trays, Part Retrievers, Grippers, ESD hand tools, and more.
Repeat Sales to Production Customers Driving Surge in Machine Demand.
Molded fiber pulp is typically made from recycled paper board and newsprint material, and is widely used for packaging of a broad category of products. It gives excellent guarding functions such as compression resistance, shock-absorbing as well as the thermal isolation characteristics during transportation and storage.
New nickel-based Höganäs Amperprint® 0233 Haynes® 282® powder enhances the capabilities of Velo3D’s end-to-end solution for customers in oil and gas, aviation, energy, space, and other high-value applications
Ralph Bendix and the Halodries would have sung a modified version of their 1960s hit "Schaffe, schaffe Häusle baue" ("Work, Work, build a house") today. And they would certainly have sung about the architectural freedoms that are possible today through printing. By Sabine Slaughter