Remember the 3D printed Lamborghini story? So much has happened since, including Lamborghini swapping it for a real one and… a pandemic. However, Sterling Backus never stopped working on the project (actually can you think of anything better to do during a lockdown?) and now he’s taking the beast – whose official name is the 3D Printed Interceptor – out for a spin.
Manufacturing on Demand
Of course, it is still very much a work in progress, with much of the finishing and painting and details still to be added. And yet you can certainly see that it is coming together impressively well, especially if you consider this has all ben assembled in a garage, using desktop 3D printers for many of the parts. Check it out.
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How GM is using 3D printing to make 30,000 COVID-19 ventilators: The Detroit automaker is not going to profit from this deal but they are expected to deliver the ventilators to the government by the end of August. With the first 6,132 ventilators being delivered by June 1. How? If COVID-19 has taught us anything it is that 3D printing can help to make key parts and rapidly shift production lines in such an emergency situation and that’s exactly what happened at GM.
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Author: Victor Anusci
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