Remove prototype�
Remove Automotive Remove Digital manufacturing Remove Sourcing
article thumbnail

How Additive Manufacturing Can Help Fix the Supply Chain

Fastener News Desk

and the cloud are enabling a vast digital manufacturing network in which a print job can be initiated in one part of the world and finished in another, exactly where the part is needed. This opens new doors for faster and more localized manufacture of parts in these and other industries. Industry 4.0

article thumbnail

Large Hybrid Steel Insert Solves Deformation, Dimensionality, Cycle Time Problems

Mold Making Technology

After a short-lived acquisition by a New York-based defense contractor and investor, the company was reacquired in 2017 by the founder/owner and a business partner under a two-year non-compete agreement that limited Linear’s metal AM work to automotive and tooling. Linear’s Livonia operation is currently undergoing a $1.5

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

IDTechEx Asks If Electronics Manufacturing Can Join the Digital Age

i4.0 today

Asked whether electronics is a ‘digital technology’, almost everyone would reply in the affirmative. However, while printed circuit boards (PCBs) enable digital technologies, the manufacturing processes used to produce them are still largely analog. Why Do We Need Digital Electronics Manufacturing?

article thumbnail

polySpectra Unlocks End-Use Healthcare & Consumer 3D Printing with New COR Bio Resin

Additive Manufacturing

We see a world where every designer, inventor, and engineer can quickly and affordably make their ideas real with digital manufacturing. Based on Nobel-winning chemistry from Caltech, polySpectra has developed new materials with unmatched properties for use in medical, aerospace, automotive, defense, and other industries.

article thumbnail

MoldMaking Technology's Most-Viewed Content 2022: Products

Mold Making Technology

Mantle highlights its new metal 3D printer, which can reportedly produce precision metal mold inserts from a CAD file in a fraction of the time and cost of conventional manufacturing, without requiring programming. These tool steel inserts can be used for prototype tooling, production tooling and conformal cooling applications.