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#231
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
wrote in message ...
In sci.physics "Greg \(Strider\) Moore" wrote: wrote in message ... In sci.physics "Greg \(Strider\) Moore" wrote: wrote in message ... In sci.physics "Greg \(Strider\) Moore" wrote: "David Mitchell" wrote in message o.uk... wrote: In sci.physics David Mitchell wrote: wrote: OK, what "stuff" would people be making at home? Jewellry, utilities, tools, gadgets. Could you be any more vague? Yes. Yes I could. Things. People will make things. All of the things. I suspect 3D printing at home will be as successful as the personal computer. I mean everyone knows they're useless at home and we'll only need a few major mainframes. Personal computer use in the home is dropping with increased use of smart phones for those important tasks such as posting on twitter and facebook. This actually hurts your point. A dozen or more years ago, no one would have imagined using phones for what we use them for now. And really a smart phone is just a tiny computer that happens to make phone calls. Again, it's the same argument made decades ago but folks not needing computers in the home. Very few people want a computer in their home, most people want an entertainment device. Exactly. Because people who claimed that "no one needs a computer in their homes" was basing the usage model on a very limited viewpoint of how computers were being used. But those "entertainment devices" are at their heart computers. Irrelevant to the point. No, that's exactly the point and you keep missing it. Which reminds me, I need to tell my friends who own 3D printers and printing parts to fix things at homes, tools, and tool holders and all manner of things that I never would have thought of myself that they're wrong and no one will effectively use a 3D printer at home. How many people do you know that own 3D printers? I'd have to poll, but at least 2 I'm sure of, and I think the number is closer to 6. And if I include access to them at libraries, workerspaces, etc. then easily dozens. I know about a dozen people that own things like welders, milling machines, drill presses, and lathes but no one that owns a 3D printer. Really? You need to get out more. I'd say the number of folks I know who own 3D printers is about the same as those who own the other items you mention. I will admit I know very few teenagers. Which has jacksquat to do with what I said? What do teenagers have to do with my reply? It would be primarily teenagers that would be interested in making essentially useless gadgets and jewelry. Again, I know about a dozen people that own things like welders, milling machines, drill presses, and lathes but no one that owns a 3D printer. As I've said, your experience is not mine. All of these are middle aged or older adults. And same with all the folks I know that own 3D printers. Honestly, it's pretty damn presumptuous to claim that there's no future to 3D printing at home. I suspect 10-20 years from now we'll be laughing at such claims. Like computers, it will continue to improve. It'll get faster, more capable, capable of using more materials, etc. Since no one in this thread has made that claim, your post is nonsense. That is basically your claim. Yet another knee jerker that reads what they think was written and not what was actually written. You keep doing that. I suggest you stop. When you stop knee jerking and read what was actually written. I'm not the one knee-jerking or making unsubstantiated claims (such as only teenagers buying 3D printers). -- Greg D. Moore http://greenmountainsoftware.wordpress.com/ CEO QuiCR: Quick, Crowdsourced Responses. http://www.quicr.net IT Disaster Response - https://www.amazon.com/Disaster-Resp...dp/1484221834/ |
#233
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
On 7/16/2017 1:16 AM, David Mitchell wrote:
wrote: In sci.physics "Greg \(Strider\) Moore" wrote: wrote in message ... In sci.physics Jeff Findley wrote: In article , says... In sci.physics "Greg \(Strider\) Moore" wrote: "David Mitchell" wrote in message o.uk... wrote: In sci.physics David Mitchell wrote: wrote: OK, what "stuff" would people be making at home? Jewellry, utilities, tools, gadgets. Could you be any more vague? Yes. Yes I could. Things. People will make things. All of the things. I suspect 3D printing at home will be as successful as the personal computer. I mean everyone knows they're useless at home and we'll only need a few major mainframes. Personal computer use in the home is dropping with increased use of smart phones for those important tasks such as posting on twitter and facebook. The original point was that the original "personal computers" were hideously expensive, very hard to use, and didn't do a whole lot. There absolutely were a lot of people who said "I'll never need one of those" back in the early 1980s. Yet they can be found (in desktop or laptop form) in the vast majority of houses in the US because the price dropped, they became much easier to use, and they could do a lot more (i.e. high speed Internet versus acoustic modems and BBSes), Besides, smart phones prove the point AGAIN! When the original Apple iPhone came out, it didn't have it's "killer app" which was the App Store, so the orignal wasn't terribly functional. On top of that, cell data service at the time was slow, slow, slow, so even surfing the Internet was painful with these new "smart phones". But again, the majority of phones I see today are now "smart phones". They're cheaper, more functional (more apps), and the cell data networks are quite good these days. New technologies keep getting cheaper and more accessible for individuals to use all the time! It's a pretty safe bet that the very same thing will happen with 3D printing. New technologies will not make aluminum or plastic cheaper. So what? They don't need to be cheaper. People literally buy millions of items made out of aluminum and plastic every day and throw them out, the material is so cheap. So the raw material for 3D printing is more expensive than the raw material for legacy fabrication methods and my response was to the two sentences above mine. Try reading them before knee jerking. Printing speed is limited by basic physics. Such as? Seriously, you don't think new technologies and concepts are possible? Heck, if nothing else, you can design printers with multiple heads if you want to. Bam, you've nearly doubled printing speed for many items. As I have already said many times accuracy is directly related to layer thickness and layer application delay is directly related to layer "hardening" time. We're nowhere near those limits yet. "The BAAM was used to manufacture the first (almost) fully 3D printed car, the Strati, for together with Local Motors. With a deposition rate of up to 38 lbs of material per hour, it is possibly the fastest machine currently on the market." what is the material it is made from? Polyethylene? Milk Bottle Plastic ? crash safety ? leave it out in the hot sun in Aridzona in the summer ?? |
#234
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
On 7/16/2017 8:58 AM, Jeff Findley wrote:
In article , says... I will admit I know very few teenagers. Which has jacksquat to do with what I said? What do teenagers have to do with my reply? It would be primarily teenagers that would be interested in making essentially useless gadgets and jewelry. Again, I know about a dozen people that own things like welders, milling machines, drill presses, and lathes but no one that owns a 3D printer. All of these are middle aged or older adults. Do they have turntables and tube amps becuase of the "warm sound" because CDs are "harsh"? VHS tapes for movies? No? Then do they also have huge collections of CDs and DVDs? HD audio discs and BluRay discs? These days, I keep most of my media on a 2TB server, and that is considered antiquated by people younger than me who simply use their phones coupled with streaming services to listen to music and watch movies and TV shows. The idea of "owning" music and movies is outdated to quite a few younger people. Why would anyone clutter their house with that crap when the Internet can provide anything you want, anywhere you want, anytime you want. Technologies improve, costs go down, times change. Jeff heads up, digital storage has *major long term storage problems*, HDs last 5 to 7 years at best, they have many failure modes. the technology improved, but the reliability went down. Too easy to lose files now, or erase them. silicon storage is not mature enough yet, it could last a long time, but many thumb drives get blown out as power comes on or goes off. CDs are Al foil on plastic, and a drop of ketchup will eat a hole in the AL layer, making the disk usless. (my kid this this) Also, heat, age, UV will all seperate the AL from the plastic, destroying data. Very poor long term stuff, the AL layer also will oxidize on you. (archival CDs disks have protective layer of plastic on it.) storing it in the cloud is another problem, read the T+C's they are not responcable for your data, the company can go out of business, no data, or get sold and teh new company sells your files, as you gave them to them, so they own it, you gave that right up, like those photos you uploaded to Facebook, are not yours anymore. |
#235
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
In sci.physics Jeff Findley wrote:
In article , says... The point is that CAD on minicomputers was very minimal. It was the domain of the mainframe. Rubylith was the tool of choice for the electronics industry. I've worked on CAE software that's tightly integrated with CAD my entire professional life. Back in about 1988 our CAD/CAE software still ran on mainframes (IBM, DEC, and etc.) but the transition to Unix workstations was in its infancy. Back then, PCs were "toys" that quite simply couldn't handle professional level CAD/CAE software. In the early 1990s Unix Workstations dominated for running CAD/CAE software. A good SGI "box" would run you about $20k in early 1990s dollars (about $33k today). Today, you can comfortably run CAD/CAE software (at least the CAE pre/post) on a sub $2k PC running Windows OS. But many customers will go quite a bit over $2k with things like solid state drives and 64 GB or more of RAM coupled with the best professional graphics card money can buy (no, they're not quite the same as consumer/gaming cards). Still, the most "decked out" PC workstation today will still cost a fraction of what a Unix workstation used to cost in the early 1990s. So again, we see yet another example of improving technologies driving down costs in a market. Nope, what we see is yet another example of consumer demand driving down manufacturing costs by encouraging high volume, automated, manufacturing. -- Jim Pennino |
#236
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
On Sun, 16 Jul 2017 09:51:19 -0400, Jeff Findley
wrote: ... Today, you can comfortably run CAD/CAE software (at least the CAE pre/post) on a sub $2k PC running Windows OS. Confirmed. I've sat and watched my brother transform a mass of equations first into logic circuitry, then into a program for a PAL, on Mom's desktop computer. Granted she had a pretty good computer, but this was twelve or fourteen years ago. -- Goat |
#237
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
In sci.physics David Mitchell wrote:
wrote: In sci.physics "Greg \(Strider\) Moore" wrote: wrote in message ... In sci.physics Jeff Findley wrote: In article , says... In sci.physics "Greg \(Strider\) Moore" wrote: "David Mitchell" wrote in message o.uk... wrote: In sci.physics David Mitchell wrote: wrote: OK, what "stuff" would people be making at home? Jewellry, utilities, tools, gadgets. Could you be any more vague? Yes. Yes I could. Things. People will make things. All of the things. I suspect 3D printing at home will be as successful as the personal computer. I mean everyone knows they're useless at home and we'll only need a few major mainframes. Personal computer use in the home is dropping with increased use of smart phones for those important tasks such as posting on twitter and facebook. The original point was that the original "personal computers" were hideously expensive, very hard to use, and didn't do a whole lot. There absolutely were a lot of people who said "I'll never need one of those" back in the early 1980s. Yet they can be found (in desktop or laptop form) in the vast majority of houses in the US because the price dropped, they became much easier to use, and they could do a lot more (i.e. high speed Internet versus acoustic modems and BBSes), Besides, smart phones prove the point AGAIN! When the original Apple iPhone came out, it didn't have it's "killer app" which was the App Store, so the orignal wasn't terribly functional. On top of that, cell data service at the time was slow, slow, slow, so even surfing the Internet was painful with these new "smart phones". But again, the majority of phones I see today are now "smart phones". They're cheaper, more functional (more apps), and the cell data networks are quite good these days. New technologies keep getting cheaper and more accessible for individuals to use all the time! It's a pretty safe bet that the very same thing will happen with 3D printing. New technologies will not make aluminum or plastic cheaper. So what? They don't need to be cheaper. People literally buy millions of items made out of aluminum and plastic every day and throw them out, the material is so cheap. So the raw material for 3D printing is more expensive than the raw material for legacy fabrication methods and my response was to the two sentences above mine. Try reading them before knee jerking. Printing speed is limited by basic physics. Such as? Seriously, you don't think new technologies and concepts are possible? Heck, if nothing else, you can design printers with multiple heads if you want to. Bam, you've nearly doubled printing speed for many items. As I have already said many times accuracy is directly related to layer thickness and layer application delay is directly related to layer "hardening" time. We're nowhere near those limits yet. The whooshing sound you hear is the point and all it's details going over you head. "The BAAM was used to manufacture the first (almost) fully 3D printed car, the Strati, for together with Local Motors. With a deposition rate of up to 38 lbs of material per hour, it is possibly the fastest machine currently on the market." The Strati is little more than a $30,000 golf cart and the finish is an abomination. The industry for both consumer and industrial 3D printers is tiny and few people do. Sales of 400,000 last year, projected sales of 1.2 million this one. Also appears to be non-linear. But that it's tiny now is irrelevant. How many people had early telephones? Or TV sets? Do you understand the difference between hobby and professional? -- Jim Pennino |
#238
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
In sci.physics Serg io wrote:
On 7/16/2017 1:16 AM, David Mitchell wrote: wrote: In sci.physics "Greg \(Strider\) Moore" wrote: wrote in message ... In sci.physics Jeff Findley wrote: In article , says... In sci.physics "Greg \(Strider\) Moore" wrote: "David Mitchell" wrote in message o.uk... wrote: In sci.physics David Mitchell wrote: wrote: OK, what "stuff" would people be making at home? Jewellry, utilities, tools, gadgets. Could you be any more vague? Yes. Yes I could. Things. People will make things. All of the things. I suspect 3D printing at home will be as successful as the personal computer. I mean everyone knows they're useless at home and we'll only need a few major mainframes. Personal computer use in the home is dropping with increased use of smart phones for those important tasks such as posting on twitter and facebook. The original point was that the original "personal computers" were hideously expensive, very hard to use, and didn't do a whole lot. There absolutely were a lot of people who said "I'll never need one of those" back in the early 1980s. Yet they can be found (in desktop or laptop form) in the vast majority of houses in the US because the price dropped, they became much easier to use, and they could do a lot more (i.e. high speed Internet versus acoustic modems and BBSes), Besides, smart phones prove the point AGAIN! When the original Apple iPhone came out, it didn't have it's "killer app" which was the App Store, so the orignal wasn't terribly functional. On top of that, cell data service at the time was slow, slow, slow, so even surfing the Internet was painful with these new "smart phones". But again, the majority of phones I see today are now "smart phones". They're cheaper, more functional (more apps), and the cell data networks are quite good these days. New technologies keep getting cheaper and more accessible for individuals to use all the time! It's a pretty safe bet that the very same thing will happen with 3D printing. New technologies will not make aluminum or plastic cheaper. So what? They don't need to be cheaper. People literally buy millions of items made out of aluminum and plastic every day and throw them out, the material is so cheap. So the raw material for 3D printing is more expensive than the raw material for legacy fabrication methods and my response was to the two sentences above mine. Try reading them before knee jerking. Printing speed is limited by basic physics. Such as? Seriously, you don't think new technologies and concepts are possible? Heck, if nothing else, you can design printers with multiple heads if you want to. Bam, you've nearly doubled printing speed for many items. As I have already said many times accuracy is directly related to layer thickness and layer application delay is directly related to layer "hardening" time. We're nowhere near those limits yet. "The BAAM was used to manufacture the first (almost) fully 3D printed car, the Strati, for together with Local Motors. With a deposition rate of up to 38 lbs of material per hour, it is possibly the fastest machine currently on the market." what is the material it is made from? Polyethylene? Milk Bottle Plastic ? crash safety ? leave it out in the hot sun in Aridzona in the summer ?? Fully recyclable thermoplastic so you can grind up your $30,000 golf cart when you are done playing with it. The printing speed is achieved by using thick layers which makes the finish horrible. Check out the finish in the photo near the end. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strati_(automobile) -- Jim Pennino |
#239
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
In sci.physics Jeff Findley wrote:
In article , says... I will admit I know very few teenagers. Which has jacksquat to do with what I said? What do teenagers have to do with my reply? It would be primarily teenagers that would be interested in making essentially useless gadgets and jewelry. Again, I know about a dozen people that own things like welders, milling machines, drill presses, and lathes but no one that owns a 3D printer. All of these are middle aged or older adults. Do they have turntables and tube amps becuase of the "warm sound" because CDs are "harsh"? VHS tapes for movies? No? Then do they also have huge collections of CDs and DVDs? HD audio discs and BluRay discs? No. snip irrelevant crap about media -- Jim Pennino |
#240
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
In sci.physics "Greg \(Strider\) Moore" wrote:
wrote in message ... snip I'm not the one knee-jerking or making unsubstantiated claims (such as only teenagers buying 3D printers). All hail and glory to the 3D printer, savior of humanity. Happy? -- Jim Pennino |
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