I think they use wire cutting to remove the part from the base plate. For melting the powder they can use 3 technologies. Electron Beam Melting (EBM) Selective Laser Sintering (SLS) Direct Metal Laser Sintering (DMLS) I hope I'm at least 80% correct.
Would have been more interesting seeing the modeling/cad side of the process, maybe the simulations they put the parts through before sending to the print bed.
The frustration of the operator not working front to back is killing me
also inb4 "that job must suck" puns lol
I was gonna say Relativity Suck-n-Blow™ Machine Sucks Hard. But I'll leave it in the replies. Sorry Relativity.
My first thought was "there must be a better attachment for the vacuum". Using the metal head of the hose can cause micro slivers on the product.
It's called the Rishi Sunak head, 2,000% more suck. 😊
If the metal is magnetic but the coating isn't they can just pass it by a magnet.
I've sucked dirt up with a vacuum before. Never been called a technician for doing so though.
that's atomized metal my guy, and that machine costs more than your car
@@Sputnick_00 And yet it is used just like a vacuum cleaner. No training required. Should I call anyone using a vacuum cleaner a technician?
@@louisvisagie283 he operates the whole printer, not just the cleaning process
That powder can give life altering damage to your body
Very satisfying 👍
I'm assuming "Power" is a typo and you intended to title this "Powder Bed Fusion..."? Edit: Fixed it! Nicely done 😂
😉
Is this a laser sintering process? Is a laser then used to cut the parts from the parent/base plate?
I think they use wire cutting to remove the part from the base plate.
For melting the powder they can use 3 technologies.
Electron Beam Melting (EBM)
Selective Laser Sintering (SLS)
Direct Metal Laser Sintering (DMLS)
I hope I'm at least 80% correct.
My Dyson can't do that 😅
but soon your dyson sphere may 🤔
the shop vacs of shop vacs
this is a very manual labor intensive process and it looks like hell on the wrists
I just watched a guy vacuum powder for 4 minutes. This isn’t the content I subscribed for.
this is the content I subscribed for
Would have been more interesting seeing the modeling/cad side of the process, maybe the simulations they put the parts through before sending to the print bed.