Nürburgring is a storied proving ground for automakers looking to test their designs, so Ford brought the latest in 3D ...
NASA's first attempt at using 3D-printed parts for rocket engines has passed its biggest, and hottest, test yet. The largest 3D-printed rocket part built to date, a rocket engine injector, survived a ...
We take our huge 3D-printed hydrofoil through a full endurance and control test! Watch its performance, stability, and ...
At the heart of future rocket engines lifting off to the Moon or Mars could be a 3D printed combustion chamber. Multiple NASA centers partnered with Virgin Orbit to develop and test a uniquely ...
Vat photopolymerization is a 3D printing technique in which a light-sensitive resin is poured into a vat, and then ...
The construction industry is finally starting to undergo its digital transformation long after many other industries have adopted computerized manufacturing. As the construction industry strives to ...
The first metal 3D printer that will be used in space is on its way to the International Space Station. The Cygnus NG-20 supply mission, which is carrying the 180kg (397 lbs) printer, launched on ...
AIM3D GmbH (Rostock, Germany) is a spin-off company from the University of Rostock with the aim to drastically reduce the cost of the additive manufacturing (AM) of metal parts. In cooperation with ...
3D printing companies hope to help produce tens of millions of swabs for the American public. It’s a race against time. The country needs tens of millions of nasal swabs if it’s going to test enough ...
Discover how Basque researchers are using 3D bioprinting with nanomaterials to create realistic tissue models with artificial ...
The test shown above, which occurred on August 22, involved an entire 3D printed injector plate—the largest 3D printed component NASA has ever tested. It delivered enough fuel and oxygen to produce 20 ...
Have you ever been tempted by those metal 3D printing services? [Carter Hurd] has, and puts them to the test with a wristwatch. (Video, embedded below.) It’s fair to say that among Hackaday readers ...