Idle musings on mass production January 27, 2014 04:13PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 300 |
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dmould
Yes, 3D printing is really great and all, but it is definitely not (yet) suitable for any sort of mass production. Apart from the time, there is zero economy of scale and quality control is more problematic. As demand increases, I feel that RepRapPro will have to abandon the idea of printing, even though it might go somewhat against their ideals - you eventually find it a lot better if you use the correct tool for the job!
(#106)
Re: Idle musings on mass production January 27, 2014 05:56PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 859 |
Re: Idle musings on mass production January 27, 2014 08:24PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 275 |
Re: Idle musings on mass production January 28, 2014 07:47AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 578 |
Re: Idle musings on mass production January 28, 2014 07:50AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 2,472 |
Quote
Radian
Dave got me thinking; maybe it's been thought of and knocked down already but how about making it a pyramid game? Everyone who buys a printer is given the opportunity to sell back printed parts to RRP ...kind of like getting a deposit back. It strikes me that a significant part of the purchase cost could be discounted in a scheme such as this.
Anyway, probably unworkable but I'm just curious to know what the issues are in mass-producing 3D printers the way RRP do it.
Re: Idle musings on mass production January 28, 2014 08:14AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 300 |
That made me chuckle. I've never bought anything from Ikea but most other self assembly stuff I've owned has had some kind of issue.Quote
dmould
Think about a situation where in every flatpack you buy from Ikea, you discover that 10% of the parts don't fit or have a design flaw. How long do you think Ikea would remain in business?
Re: Idle musings on mass production January 28, 2014 03:51PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 46 |
Re: Idle musings on mass production January 29, 2014 03:18AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 66 |
Re: Idle musings on mass production January 29, 2014 03:34AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 256 |
Re: Idle musings on mass production January 29, 2014 08:23AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 2,472 |
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dieterzar
I was going to comment yesterday but didn't get a chance. I must apologize, I often use my tablet to post and things go wongkey typing sometimes!
@dmould
What you talk about is how the chinese changed the world. They don't worry about quality of supply or supply chain audits. I import a lot and high standards and quality control don't make china cheap as a supplier! After all it comes from china, quality what? If I sold you a crappy part from south africa, you would probably say, ah it's from africa, not surprised. When it comes from the UK or the US, where is the quality control? Send it back! My point is there is an "expected norm". 3D printers are not quite at production levels yet, one quality of prints, I must say at 0.10 layer height it looks good and the obvious one is speed. By the way I see HP want to get into the "home 3D printer" market. Sure to be a game changer and set standards, which is good.
Raw material supply is second and this is where it gets interesting. I was in the plastics industry for years. Worked for a company called Plasticwrap Pty Ltd. We did sheet extrusion, bags, film, you name it. Sasol polymers supplied us raw material in the form of 50kg bags of pellets back then, HDPE, PET, ABS or whatever you wanted. SASOL is very big and exports huge amounts in raw pellet form. Now they don't do PLA but every grade of ABS you can think of.
The bottom line is, I started looking at extruding my own ABS filament. I buy ABS filament that probably came from south africa in raw form. Its crazy to think that we export to china in pellet form and then re-import it in filament form with cost of manufacture, shipping, profits and so on. Now there is money to be made and not so much in printing parts for commercial use. Its not because it would be more expensive to produce locally, just no person is doing it. Most of the filament out of china on ebay is produced by some guy in his "shed".
If plan on printing for commercial purposes, like all things, you will build a name over time through quality supply and it is possible for sure. My problem is filament costs and while PLA is great, the commercial world is going to be after ABS parts.
Dieter
#257
Re: Idle musings on mass production January 29, 2014 11:28AM |
Registered: 16 years ago Posts: 84 |
Note that others have already gone down the crowd printing/distributed manufacturing route, e.g. [reprap.org] . Actually there was some comment on the Ormerod and RRP's design decisions e.g. [forums.reprap.org] , in particular that it seemed to be less self replicating as it used less printed parts and more laser cut parts etc and how it was probably a sign they were moving to more of a classical mass production.Quote
Radian
Well it was just a musing. Still, there's a healthy hinterland where hobbyists do business on ebay selling quality built clones of things (e.g. stepsticks). Ebay reputation is one example of a loosely coupled quality control system that might be adequate. Whatever, I think sub-£1000 3D printing will remain a niche business until the big names see it as being a truly commercial proposition with mass market appeal.
On a related theme, reading about the problems with printing ABS with various bits of Ormorod melting in the process made me wonder if someone who has converted the vulnerable parts might "set up shop" making them available to others.
Re: Idle musings on mass production January 29, 2014 05:12PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 300 |
Re: Idle musings on mass production January 29, 2014 06:13PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 33 |
Quote
Radian
In another topic:
Everyone who buys a printer is given the opportunity to sell back printed parts to RRP ...kind of like getting a deposit back. It strikes me that a significant part of the purchase cost could be discounted in a scheme such as this.
Anyway, probably unworkable but I'm just curious to know what the issues are in mass-producing 3D printers the way RRP do it.
Re: Idle musings on mass production January 29, 2014 08:10PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 2,472 |
[cough] Clive Sinclair [/cough]Quote
rm2014
Have they unwittingly, or intentionally managed to get the community to debug their product for them? This is a model that software companies use often, they just release early and let the early users report on the bugs. This is a great way to cut development costs and get product to market, I've used it myself. Now that RRP have generated some cash it will make it easier for them to attract funding and grow, I expect great things from them.
Cheers Radian