Medical Company Bayer to Test New Drugs on 3D Printed Heart Tissue
German pharmaceutical giant Bayer has signed a cooperation agreement to test new drugs on human hear ...
News and Insights of 3D Printing and Manufacturing
German pharmaceutical giant Bayer has signed a cooperation agreement to test new drugs on human hear ...
Prvok (Protozoon) will be built in the Czech Republic this June. All images courtesy of Stavební sp ...
Makeway is a modular, creative, unique super-puzzle with magnetic bits that attach seamlessly to all ferromagnetic materials-like a fridge, a locker or a whiteboard, a car. Simply move the track, connector and trick pieces around for an exciting brand new marble challenge. Now that it has collected over 4 million euro between the Kickstarter and Indiegogo crowdfunding platforms, the final products will be produced by injection molding, but it probably would have never seen the light if it were not for some intensive 3D printing to make the first prototype in the videos above and below.
Technology has progressed at amazing rates. Think about it: just four decades ago, Sony released the first walkman. Today, you’d be hard pressed to find one in a store and most youngsters wouldn’t even recognize a cassette. For those for whom nostalgia bites hard, a creative design agency has created an homage to the now obsolete Walkman, ironically using state-of-the-art 3D printing technology to do so.
https://youtu.be/rM8d6jiQZ1w One of the most exciting aspects of the technological world is how inn ...
When someone hears about 3D printing, they think of a cutting-edge production technology that has no ...
The goal of the collaboration between GE Renewable Energy, COBOD, and LafargeHolcim is to build a 20 ...
Worldwide, the "WarpSPEE3D" 3D metal printer has been rapidly deployed and adjusted by the Australia ...
Engineers at the Max Planck Institute for Scientific Research (MPIE) in Dusseldorf and the Fraunhofe ...
After Elementum’s own aluminum alloys, APWORKS‘s Scalmalloy aluminum alloy has now also been officially approved by the FIA (Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile) and added to the Formula 1 regulation as one of the additive metal materials. Given that APWORKS is based in Germany it seems safe to assume that the current world champion Mercedes team will be making use of the material for its seemingly unbeatable vehicle. Mercedes F1 has been a major adopter of AM for rapid car development throughout its tenure.