Awesome!
Can we use bacon as he print medium?!
3D Printed e30 Parts
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This would be the solution to the rediculously expensive evo III brake ducts!
3d printed in ABS plastic.
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I see this as the future. In a couple decades we'll be printing our food too.Leave a comment:
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My printer is not quite that big yet lol. Average printer build surfaces are around 7" or so. I'd like to build a much bigger one in the future though.
Guten is now selling 3D printed brake duct adaptersLeave a comment:
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You could print grills and pieces of trim like that one guy said. That would be pretty cool! You'd probably make a killing selling those "i" lips that everyone is missing.Some SLS machines have come pretty close to printing full-strength metal parts. However ABS is plenty strong for most practical uses.. obviously you can't expect it to be as strong as metal, but for small parts that don't see a lot of stress ABS can do the job. I have an FDM printer, and I would like to start printing parts for the E30 crowd.Leave a comment:
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Some SLS machines have come pretty close to printing full-strength metal parts. However ABS is plenty strong for most practical uses.. obviously you can't expect it to be as strong as metal, but for small parts that don't see a lot of stress ABS can do the job. I have an FDM printer, and I would like to start printing parts for the E30 crowd.Leave a comment:
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My GF's brother is an industrial designed and has a small MakerBot in his apartment. It was fun to mess around print out little stuff but the material he was using was hardly what I'd call structural. Still, the technology is there and will be interesting to see where it heads in the future.Leave a comment:
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This exactly, my university has a few 3-d printers but as far as being applicable to e30s its not there yet IMO. Prototyping small pieces for the average joe yes, but beyond that its just a very expensive game to get into today.At this point, plastic parts are possible, but they have strength limits. 3D printing currently is pretty much only used for prototyping. End product printing just isn't here yet.
I do agree though that the next 10-20 years will be very interesting. I figure I will own a 3D printer in my lifetime. I see them being a common thing to kids under 10, at least in their adult life. Kind of like microwave ovens.Leave a comment:
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I think it will come in very handy for small plastic pieces inside and out. Grilles, tweeter pods, blanks, clips, door handle frames, etc...Leave a comment:
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3D printing plastic parts for large scale production is available today. Most older or cheaper machines used the very fragile plastics. We have one at work for prototyping that prints in ABS plastic. It's just as strong as any other ABS plastic in the E30. Resolution and accuracy of course depends on the machine, but they are surprisingly good for how cheap they are getting. With the ABS plastic you can sand it smooth, paint it, tap threads, snap fit, etc.Leave a comment:
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At this point, plastic parts are possible, but they have strength limits. 3D printing currently is pretty much only used for prototyping. End product printing just isn't here yet.
I do agree though that the next 10-20 years will be very interesting. I figure I will own a 3D printer in my lifetime. I see them being a common thing to kids under 10, at least in their adult life. Kind of like microwave ovens.Leave a comment:
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Simple plastic parts I can see, but 3D printed metal parts is still out of reach of Joe Average.Leave a comment:
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3d printed Hartge badges they would be fairly easy too make and they are retardly hard to findLeave a comment:
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Neat stuff. Is it impervious?Right, but there are printers out there that can print in a cobalt compound and I hear they are developing a 3D printer that even uses graphene, which is a really cool material!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphene
Maybe what I've seen lately was the new generation of cheap desktop printers - the output looked pretty rough.
You see things like this though - amazing...
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