coursera-assistant-3d-printing-applications
/
docs
/03_module-2-why-is-it-revolutionary
/03_the-3d-printing-revolution-facts-concepts
/01_whats-special-about-3d-printing.en.txt
[MUSIC] Hi, in this video, my goal is to examine the revolutionary | |
potential of 3D printing. In particular, we'll take a look at | |
what's special about this technology, and how 3D printing will | |
change the way we live. In addition, we'll take a look at some earlier | |
examples of this revolution in progress. And where 3D printing is | |
headed in the future. One of my favorite quotes about 3D | |
printing came from Neil Gershenfeld. Neil's a professor at MIT, founder for | |
the Center of Bits and Atoms. And he said about almost | |
10 years ago that, 20 years from now we will have Star Trek | |
replicators that can make anything. This quote nicely illustrates the | |
revolutionary potential of 3D printing. Although professional Gershenfeld's | |
prediction may seem a bit hard to believe, he's not alone. Over the past three years, Jeff Bezos, | |
Jeffery Immelt, and President Barack Obama have identified 3D printing as | |
a revolutionary new technology. And in fact, according to several leading | |
media sources including Wired Magazine, The Economist, and the New York Times, | |
3D printing will lead to a new industrial revolution and | |
dramatically change our economy. Our additional resources page contains | |
links to a number of books and articles about the 3D printing revolution. In particular, I recommend this book. Makers, by Chris Anderson. Chris was the former editor and chief of | |
Wired magazine, which writes a lot about 3D printing and the maker movement and | |
this is one of the first, one of the best books, | |
about the maker movement more broadly, but also how 3D printing | |
will change our economy. I recommend it highly. Now let's take a look at what's | |
special about 3D printing. 3D printing has a number of advantages compared to traditional | |
manufacturing techniques. I'd like to focus on four of them. The first advantage is Sustainability. 3D printing is a very sustainable | |
manufacturing approach in contrast to traditional subtractive manufacturing | |
techniques such as laser cutting or lathing, 3D printing produces | |
very little material waste. On average a 3D printed product | |
such as this uses about 90% less material than an object made | |
using subtractive manufacturing and thus the material costs of | |
3D printing are quite low. Second advantage is Self Assembly. Traditional manufacturing techniques have | |
a tough time making complex products. Usually, complex products | |
are composed of multiple parts, have to be made separately, and | |
then assembled together, often by hand. In contrast, 3D printing allows | |
us to create complex objects that come out of | |
the printer self-assembled. Let me show you a couple of examples. I'm holding here some | |
3D printed chain mail, and this chain mail came out of | |
a desktop printer already assembled. So all these different | |
parts of the chain mail were put together while | |
being made by the printer. There's another way to make something | |
like this using traditional manufacturing techniques. A second example is this | |
assembled gears and this gear piece has a number of gears that | |
turn, as you can see and this, again, came out of the printer self | |
assembled just like this. A third example is General Electric, | |
GE, which makes airplane jets. Here's an example of a fuel | |
injection device for a large jet engine that used to be | |
made with 26 separate components. [UNKOWN] prints this as one single piece | |
using advanced 3D printing technology. There's no other manufacturing process | |
capable of making these kinds of objects without some form of | |
post production assembly. A third advantage of 3D | |
printing is Digitization. 3D printers create products | |
from digital files. So this technology blurs the divide | |
between the digital and the physical. A digital object is no | |
different than a digital song. It can be shipped electronically, | |
downloaded, and printed locally. So eliminates the cost, | |
financial, temporal and environmental of shipping | |
of physical product. A fourth advantage is Scope over Scale, | |
traditional manufacture techniques such as injection molding had the advantage | |
of economies and scale. In essence as the number of units produced | |
increases, their average cost decreases. Now the notion of economy as a scale is | |
one of the foundations of modern economic thought and a key reason why most of the things that | |
we own are mass produced by big companies. 3D printing throws this concept out | |
the window because 3D printers start with a blank slate, there are no set up costs. As a result it's just as easy | |
to make 100 different objects as it is to make 100 identical objects. So there are no more economies | |
of scale in 3D printing. Instead, 3D printing provides economies | |
of scope, by providing a way to make many different objects at a cost that's | |
much lower than traditional manufacturing. Economies of scope actually | |
favor smaller firms and individual manufacturers, | |
because these smaller firms and individuals have lower overall fixed | |
cost compared to a large company. So 3D printing allows a small startup to | |
easily compete with a large corporation. Due to these four features, | |
3D printing is a democratizing technology. It allows nearly anyone | |
to become a manufacturer by lowering the cost of entry. No need to start a company or | |
own a factory. All you need is an idea, | |
some knowledge of 3D design software and access to a 3D printer. Our specialization is designed to help | |
you with all three of those things. [MUSIC] |