Discover how to manufacture tooling faster while lowering costs and enhancing safety with 3D printing.
Traditional tooling is heavy, costly, and slow to produce, but it doesn’t have to be. With 3D printed jigs and fixtures, you can:
3D printing is transforming how manufacturers create jigs and fixtures, providing a flexible, cost-effective alternative to traditional machining. Learn how 3D printing eliminates inefficiencies, speeds up manufacturing, and reduces material waste while improving worker ergonomics and safety.
Aerospace companies leverage 3D printed drill guides, ground support equipment and other tools to meet schedules and cut costs.
3D printing allows faster, on-demand tool creation to minimize downtime and keep production lines operational.
Aerospace companies leverage 3D printed drill guides, ground support equipment and other tools to meet schedules and cut costs.
3D printing allows faster, on-demand tool creation to minimize downtime and keep production lines operational.
3D printing’s limitless design capability lets doctors create patient-specific surgical guides for more effective outcomes.
The Valiant TMS AM Lab printed the tool on the Origin 3D printer, whose P3™ DLP technology offers an injection mold-like surface finish, and that comes with a broad range of specialty materials. This resulted in a 78% cost reduction and 79% faster print time compared to other additive processes.
3D printing plays an integral part in Microsoft's "Fail Fast" development process and PolyJet™ models are a part of our daily routine.
When tooling engineer Dave Howe was asked by his manager what would help the company move forward, Howe’s reply was “additive manufacturing” (AM). What he probably didn’t realize at the time was that his vision for how AM technology might help would change how they do business, and they’d never look back.