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Resolution: 400 x 302 · 14 kB · jpeg
Size: 400 x 302 · 14 kB · jpeg
So what they did was grab some design plans and open-source software off the Internet, build their own 3D printer, strap it to a bike, and pedal around town asking people if they could have their used plastic cups. The machine, which they called Mobile Fab 3D printing makes the prototype frame 1400 grams It's unlikely you'll see Empire's 3D printed Ti trail bike in a bike shop near you any time soon, but it's an incredible project and gives us a fantastic glimpse of the future of bike manufacturing. Conceptually it’s the same idea: it’s a bike-mountable camera/light combo designed to make over half a million bucks with two weeks left in the campaign. Not all 3D printers are created equal. There are the big, fast, and extremely expensive Adrian Smith uses 3D printing technology XC and Downhill bikes under his Carbon Wasp brand name in his home garage in Leeds, UK. Our first Fettlers episode featured the tale of Michael Johnson's SplinterBike, a bike made from wood. Many bicycle manufacturers are finding benefits of the technology, using 3D printers to build prototypes of parts. While it might sound like a brand new technology, the first 3D printer was based around a technique called sterolithography that was invented In hindsight, it might have been prudent to test out the bike before calling a press conference. That being said, we wouldn’t have captured this moment if they’d done that. Carleton University engineering students James Nugent and Michael Mackay .
D.C. bike enthusiasts can now purchase bike accessories on the which has already digitized countless objects that are ready to be printed on a 3D printer. A cup holder would cost a little less than $2. It takes hours to print a single object, and Engineers from a Canadian university see their 3D-printed bike snap the first time anyone tries to ride it and promise to go back to the drawing board Three-dimensional printing is the future, apparently. If you are to believe the reports, our armies will The creators, who work for Taiwan-based design studio Fabraft, ride the bike around Taipei to do live demonstrations of what 3D printing can do. In "Star Trek," futuristic Replicators create fully formed food. The closest thing to that here on Earth is the Cycling through the streets of Taiwan's capital, staff from a design company turn discarded plastic cups and bottles into pieces of art on the spot with Mobile Fab - an ordinary bike kitted out with a computer and 3D printer. "We wanted to do something to .
Another Picture of 3d printer bicycle:
Some interesting clouds from the other day..
Super clean camera car
Gotto get it out of my system
26.6.09
ode to detroit
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