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#282
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
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#283
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
wrote:
In sci.physics wrote: On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 05:08:56 +0100, David Mitchell wrote: snip There you are again, playing the trinket card; which I've already trumped. No, you haven't. You just keep hallucinating. Pointless; he just wants to argue until there is a "winner" and keeps spinning off in tangents. I am sorry that you can no longer follow complex arguments. Perhaps I could summarise for you? |
#284
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
wrote:
In sci.physics wrote: On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 05:08:56 +0100, David Mitchell wrote: snip There you are again, playing the trinket card; which I've already trumped. No, you haven't. You just keep hallucinating. Pointless; he just wants to argue until there is a "winner" and keeps spinning off in tangents. Pot. Kettle. Star Trek Replicator. -- "Some people get lost in thought because it's such unfamiliar territory." --G. Behn |
#285
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
On 7/19/2017 11:56 PM, David Mitchell wrote:
wrote: On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 05:08:56 +0100, David Mitchell Uh, the widely varying properties, maybe? Titanium and gold have slightly different properties. Jimp posted a reference to a Wikipedia article. You really should read it. We can 3-D print *right now*: Thermoplastics, eutectic metals, edible materials, Rubbers, Modeling clay, Plasticine, Metal clay (including Precious Metal Clay), Ceramic materials, Metal alloy, cermet, metal matrix composite, ceramic matrix composite Nylon or Nylon with short carbon fiber + reinforcement in the form Carbon, Kevlar, Glass and Glass for high temperature fiber Photopolymer,Photopolymer + thermally activated chemistry Almost any metal alloy including Titanium alloys why not print pizza.... ? should be a huge demand for that... |
#286
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
On 07/20/2017 11:18 AM, Serg io wrote:
On 7/19/2017 11:56 PM, David Mitchell wrote: wrote: On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 05:08:56 +0100, David Mitchell Uh, the widely varying properties, maybe? Titanium and gold have slightly different properties. Jimp posted a reference to a Wikipedia article. You really should read it. We can 3-D print *right now*: Thermoplastics, eutectic metals, edible materials, Rubbers, Modeling clay, Plasticine, Metal clay (including Precious Metal Clay), Ceramic materials, Metal alloy, cermet, metal matrix composite, ceramic matrix composite Nylon or Nylon with short carbon fiber + reinforcement in the form Carbon, Kevlar, Glass and Glass for high temperature fiber Photopolymer,Photopolymer + thermally activated chemistry Almost any metal alloy including Titanium alloys why not print pizza.... ? should be a huge demand for that... I saw a pancake printer at Makerfest a few years ago. The pancakes were pretty good tasting too. Cheers Phil Hobbs -- Dr Philip C D Hobbs Principal Consultant ElectroOptical Innovations LLC Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics 160 North State Road #203 Briarcliff Manor NY 10510 hobbs at electrooptical dot net http://electrooptical.net |
#287
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
On Thu, 20 Jul 2017 11:34:24 -0400, Phil Hobbs
wrote: On 07/20/2017 11:18 AM, Serg io wrote: On 7/19/2017 11:56 PM, David Mitchell wrote: wrote: On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 05:08:56 +0100, David Mitchell Uh, the widely varying properties, maybe? Titanium and gold have slightly different properties. Jimp posted a reference to a Wikipedia article. You really should read it. We can 3-D print *right now*: Thermoplastics, eutectic metals, edible materials, Rubbers, Modeling clay, Plasticine, Metal clay (including Precious Metal Clay), Ceramic materials, Metal alloy, cermet, metal matrix composite, ceramic matrix composite Nylon or Nylon with short carbon fiber + reinforcement in the form Carbon, Kevlar, Glass and Glass for high temperature fiber Photopolymer,Photopolymer + thermally activated chemistry Almost any metal alloy including Titanium alloys why not print pizza.... ? should be a huge demand for that... I saw a pancake printer at Makerfest a few years ago. The pancakes were pretty good tasting too. Why would you print, rather than extrude? |
#288
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
In sci.physics wrote:
On Thu, 20 Jul 2017 11:34:24 -0400, Phil Hobbs wrote: On 07/20/2017 11:18 AM, Serg io wrote: On 7/19/2017 11:56 PM, David Mitchell wrote: wrote: On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 05:08:56 +0100, David Mitchell Uh, the widely varying properties, maybe? Titanium and gold have slightly different properties. Jimp posted a reference to a Wikipedia article. You really should read it. We can 3-D print *right now*: Thermoplastics, eutectic metals, edible materials, Rubbers, Modeling clay, Plasticine, Metal clay (including Precious Metal Clay), Ceramic materials, Metal alloy, cermet, metal matrix composite, ceramic matrix composite Nylon or Nylon with short carbon fiber + reinforcement in the form Carbon, Kevlar, Glass and Glass for high temperature fiber Photopolymer,Photopolymer + thermally activated chemistry Almost any metal alloy including Titanium alloys why not print pizza.... ? should be a huge demand for that... I saw a pancake printer at Makerfest a few years ago. The pancakes were pretty good tasting too. Why would you print, rather than extrude? Some people are monomaniacal about 3D printing. -- Jim Pennino |
#289
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
wrote:
In sci.physics wrote: On Thu, 20 Jul 2017 11:34:24 -0400, Phil Hobbs wrote: On 07/20/2017 11:18 AM, Serg io wrote: On 7/19/2017 11:56 PM, David Mitchell wrote: wrote: On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 05:08:56 +0100, David Mitchell Uh, the widely varying properties, maybe? Titanium and gold have slightly different properties. Jimp posted a reference to a Wikipedia article. You really should read it. We can 3-D print *right now*: Thermoplastics, eutectic metals, edible materials, Rubbers, Modeling clay, Plasticine, Metal clay (including Precious Metal Clay), Ceramic materials, Metal alloy, cermet, metal matrix composite, ceramic matrix composite Nylon or Nylon with short carbon fiber + reinforcement in the form Carbon, Kevlar, Glass and Glass for high temperature fiber Photopolymer,Photopolymer + thermally activated chemistry Almost any metal alloy including Titanium alloys why not print pizza.... ? should be a huge demand for that... I saw a pancake printer at Makerfest a few years ago. The pancakes were pretty good tasting too. Why would you print, rather than extrude? Some people are monomaniacal about 3D printing. Yes, you are, and the rest of us wish you would STFU. -- You are What you do When it counts. |
#290
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Towards the *fully* 3D-printed electric cars.
On Thu, 20 Jul 2017 20:42:26 -0000, wrote:
In sci.physics wrote: On Thu, 20 Jul 2017 11:34:24 -0400, Phil Hobbs wrote: On 07/20/2017 11:18 AM, Serg io wrote: On 7/19/2017 11:56 PM, David Mitchell wrote: wrote: On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 05:08:56 +0100, David Mitchell Uh, the widely varying properties, maybe? Titanium and gold have slightly different properties. Jimp posted a reference to a Wikipedia article. You really should read it. We can 3-D print *right now*: Thermoplastics, eutectic metals, edible materials, Rubbers, Modeling clay, Plasticine, Metal clay (including Precious Metal Clay), Ceramic materials, Metal alloy, cermet, metal matrix composite, ceramic matrix composite Nylon or Nylon with short carbon fiber + reinforcement in the form Carbon, Kevlar, Glass and Glass for high temperature fiber Photopolymer,Photopolymer + thermally activated chemistry Almost any metal alloy including Titanium alloys why not print pizza.... ? should be a huge demand for that... I saw a pancake printer at Makerfest a few years ago. The pancakes were pretty good tasting too. Why would you print, rather than extrude? Some people are monomaniacal about 3D printing. I guess the difference is the size of the dot. Pancakes are just a big dot. |
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