MIT?s new 3D printing technique can produce furniture in minutes
?Rapid liquid printing? could let you customize your office chair The material mavens over at MIT have teamed up with the office furniture company Steelcase to pioneer an innovative 3D printing technique called ?Rapid Liquid Printing.? The process enables the fast manufacturing of large-scale, custom furniture pieces by essentially ?drawing? them within an enormous vat of gel. A machine-controlled nozzle extrudes liquid plastic into the 3D space of the vat. It reacts to the gel, hardening within mere minutes before being hosed off and put to use.
The experimental process has already been used to produce a top for one of Steelcase?s Turnstone Bassline Tables, and promises to offer more opportunity for furniture customization in future years. Steelcase also touts the expressive freedom such a process could give to designers.
?When you?re printing freely within a gel suspension, you can create these dynamic shapes without the traditional 3D printing support material and structure,? said Steelcase senior industrial designer Yuka Hiyoshi in an interview with Forbes.
Check out the sci-fi-esque printing technique in the video:
...
-------------------------------- |
OFIS airlifts climbers' shelter onto precarious Alpine ledge |
|
The First Undersea Roundabout Is in the Faroe Islands
26-04-2024 09:15 - (
architecture )