EOS North America delivers 1,000th 3D printer 3D Printer Hardware

EOS, the world’s leading technology supplier in the field of industrial 3D printing for metals and polymers, has delivered and installed its 1,000th machine in the North American market. The milestone printer – an AMCM M4K from EOS’ AMCM business unit – is a large-scale, four-laser, high productivity system, installed at Florida-based Sintavia.

As one of the world’s largest metal additive manufacturers, Sintavia focuses on the production of advanced propulsion systems for the aerospace, defense, and space industries. Unique to the AMCM M4K is its ability to 3D print applications up to one meter high – a feat unimaginable in additive manufacturing only a few short years ago.

“Constant innovation, consistency between machines, and industrial-scale production dependability are why aerospace manufacturers of tomorrow rely on EOS,” said Brian Neff, CEO of Sintavia. “While this AMCM M4K represents the 1,000th machine in North America for EOS, it also represents the 17th EOS machine for Sintavia. Their machines form the foundation of our company’s manufacturing technology, and we are thrilled to be part of this milestone achievement in EOS’ history.”

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The delivery of EOS’ 1,000th machine in North America comes at a time when additive manufacturing is experiencing incredible market growth.

“This achievement is a significant milestone in the history of EOS and a testament to the accelerating adoption of additive manufacturing in North America,” said Andrew Snow, senior vice president of EOS North America, and one of its longest-tenured employees. “As the proliferation of AM continues, we remain the leading innovator of hardware, materials, services, and education aimed at strengthening the successful adoption and advancement of AM as a mainstream manufacturing process.”

EOS was founded in April 1989 by Dr. Hans Langer in Gräfelfing, Germany, a small municipality south of Munich. By 1990, global brands like BMW were using EOS’ STEREOS 400 stereolithography system, and within five years the company had introduced its first powder bed-based laser sintering system for manufacturing prototypes from plastic. The organization continued to develop and produce new, increasingly innovative industrial 3D printers in the years that followed while also undertaking a global expansion, establishing a presence in Italy, the United Kingdom and Finland. The company founded its North American headquarters in Novi, Michigan, in 2001. Today EOS North America also has its technical center in Pflugerville, Texas, and its materials engineering and production center at Advanced Laser Materials (ALM) in Temple, Texas.

Since its founding, EOS has continually innovated, collaborated, and worked to advance the capabilities of AM leading to its current, robust ecosystem of products and services. From hardware, software, and materials development and production, to its Additive Minds team of applied engineers, EOS’ experience and end-to-end offerings of products, services, and training are designed to support organizations at each step of their AM journey – from start to part.

“When customers purchase from EOS, they are installing mature technology that leverages more than three decades of experience, as well as complete support for all of their AM requirements,” added Snow. “While our industry looks vastly different than it did over 30 years ago, one thing has remained: EOS continues to serve as the industry leader, pushing industrial 3D printing in new, groundbreaking directions.”

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Author: Davide Sher

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