3D printing coming to the desktop

3D isn't just for TV anymore. A new partnership between HP and Stratasys aims to offer affordable 3D desktop printers.
A 3D printer from Stratasys, whose technology HP is implementing in its own product

A 3D printer from Stratasys, whose technology HP is implementing in its own product

Hewlett-Packard, reigning inkjet giant, has partnered with Stratasys, a leading manufacturer of rapid prototyping machines, to bring 3D "printing" of solid objects to the desktop.The HP-Stratasys models have been described as small enough to sit on a desktop, quiet enough to use in an office, and priced under $US15,000.

Currently, Stratasys' most popular offerings under the Dimension brand, the "SST" series, are priced closer to $US30,000, and are roughly the size of a small refrigerator.

The push by HP-Stratasys to market an entry-level desktop rapid prototyping platform may have been spurred by a series of successful DIY projects; Most notable among them the "RepRap" and "MakerBot Cupcake", both of which sell as kits for under $US1,000.

Like the RepRap and Cupcake, the HP-Stratasys platform will operate using ABS plastic material. It's likely that the HP-Stratasys machine will, at least initially, be more like the additive approach used by Stratasys' Dimension line and the Reprap, not the CNC-style of the MakerBot Cupcake machine.

Since the initial release of Stratasys' rapid prototyping platforms, the software used to create the STL files required to generate a three-dimensional print has dropped significantly in price commercially, and been released free and open source by the Blender project.

Assuming HP-Stratasys can continue to lower the price of their desktop-style rapid prototyping machines, it may not be long until we're printing our own household items as-needed, and one step closer to a Star Trek-style replicator.

(Stratasys via Wired Gadget Lab)

Photo: Bekathwia on Flickr; licensed under Creative Commons

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More about: ABS, Creative, Facebook, Hewlett-Packard, HP, Stratasys
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