Make:able Challenge: Design & 3D Print Assistive Technology for the Disabled

Service bureau PrintLab is partnering with Autodesk for an exciting new competition for schools. The make:able challenge represents what should be a remarkable technological journey for students and teachers as they are invited to use either Tinkercad or Fusion 360 software  (both options are products of Autodesk) and 3D printing to make free, assistive technology with the following directions:

“Design and make a product or prototype that improves the day-to-day life of someone who struggles with mobility in their hands.”

This comprehensive challenge—and learning experience for students—is centered around an online toolkit provided for students, including a teacher’s guide and accompanying lesson plans. Students are expected to team up into smaller groups and use the toolkit as a foundation for increasing their design skills, especially in 3D—with the use of Autodesk products. More importantly, though, the competition is designed to help them find meaning in their communities, whether locally or online, as well as learning about how individuals must cope with disabilities and can use assistive technology for a better quality of life.

Make:able toolkits also offer inspiration through the following:

  • Stories and example solutions
  • Worksheets and a variety of activities designed to encourage a human-centered approach and teach empathy
  • Methods for encouraging design-based thinking for creating concepts and opportunities
  • Directing students to tell their story through their work
  • Designing, 3D printing, testing, and making changes to products

“Having supported hundreds of schools with 3D printing curriculum, we have witnessed firsthand some amazing student talent across the globe,” said Jason Yeung, Co-Founder of PrintLab. “It is our belief that this talent should expand outside of the classroom and be put to use on real-world challenges that have a positive impact on society.”

The key behind PrintLab and Autodesk partnering was to create an integrative program for schools to help encourage students in design and 3D printing, highlighting their work in both digital and AM processes.

“By participating in the make:able challenge, students will experience The Future of Making to help design and make a better world,” said Steven Parkinson, Education Manager at Autodesk.

Students ages 18 and under are eligible to participate in the make:able challenge, to be included in the following types of educational courses:

  • Design and technology classes
  • Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) lessons
  • After-school programs
  • Workshops
  • Distance and remote learning opportunities

Teachers who register for the make:able program will receive challenge toolkits on September 1st. The teacher’s pack includes development resources and guided lesson plans. Entries are to be judged by a panel of experts in April 2021, with prizes including 3D printers for winning teams.

Challenges like make:able stress both the importance of using innovation and 3D printing to do good in the world, as well as the importance of STEM education for the younger generations. Many projects are designed to interest more girls in 3D printing—a powerful tool for STEM—as well as creating workshops and specific STEM apps for kids.  Find out more here.

[Source / Images: PrintLab]

The post Make:able Challenge: Design & 3D Print Assistive Technology for the Disabled appeared first on 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing.

3D printing industry news sliced: EOS, ExOne, Materialise, Essentium, Relativity Space, PrintLab, 3D Printz, and more

In this edition of Sliced, the 3D Printing Industry news digest, we cover the latest business developments, partnerships, and acquisitions across our industry.  Today’s edition features updates on the 3D printing industries reaction to COVID-19, the latest software news, space launch agreements, industry partnerships and of course, the King of Belgium.  Read on for the […]

Innovative Open-Source 3D Printable Air-Jet System Creates Alginate Hydrogels

In the recently published ‘Open-source 3D printed air-jet for generating monodispersed alginate microhydrogels,’ University of California Davis researchers explore a new design for creating bioprinting materials.

In 3D printing hydrogel microbeads in a ‘controllable size,’ the researchers were able to create a model to work from, studying the potential for alginate microbeads in a variety of other applications. Microbead generators use polymers and crosslinker solutions in producing microscale hydrogel, and are being studied for biomedical applications, to include drug and cell delivery.

“In these biomedical science applications, alginate is a particularly attractive polymer for microbeads, as it is biocompatible, undergoes rapid gelation under gentle conditions, and enables controllable mesh size,” state the researchers. “Alginate, a copolymer comprised of (1,4)-linked β-D-mannuronate (M) and α-L-guluronate (G) residues, crosslinks in the presence of divalent cations, such as Ca2+, resulting in the formation of a 3D polymeric network characteristic of hydrogels.”

Alginate microbeads are commonly generated using:

  • Droplet microfluidics
  • Coaxial airflow units
  • Two-channel air-jackets
  • High voltage

Here, the researchers created a new 3D printed air-jet system inspired by air bifurcation and electrostatic bead generators, with both modularity and sterility as goals in design and functionality. The research team used Fusion 360 for design, and Cura software for slicing (splitting the design into the air-jet, air intake, and supports). Parts were printed on an MP Select Mini V2, using PLA filament.

The new design of this system allows for use of a needle and syringe, through attachment to the pump or adjustable stands.

Open-source 3D printed air-jet for generating monodispersed alginate microhydrogels

Overall, the design was simple and open source, resulting in microbeads without any requirement for complicated assembly or sophisticated lab equipment. The air-jet offers benefits like reproducibility and reliability, and the researchers state that this is the first fully 3D printable air-jet system that they know of, ‘offering control over microbeads with defined set-up parameters.’ They were also able to harness bacteria and alginate lyase, encapsulating cargo able to break down the hydrogel matrix.

“Here, we load microbeads with bacteria, and their growth over 24 hours results in pockets of bacteria within the hydrogel matrix. The encapsulation of bacteria is promising for numerous biomedical applications, including probiotic delivery, especially for anaerobic bacteria sensitive to atmospheric oxygen concentrations,” concluded the researchers. “By using the air-jet system with nitrogen gas in a nitrogen-enriched chamber, microbeads could be rapidly generated with anaerobic bacteria while displacing oxygen. Furthermore, the use of enzymes to degrade alginate has been previously used to control the delivery of endothelial progenitor cells and adeno-associated vectors.”

“The system’s modular design allows easy cleaning, interchangeability to customized set-ups, and rapid replacement. We have demonstrated that alginate microbeads can be generated using this open-source air jet system with reasonable microbead diameters and variance,” stated the researchers. “We anticipate the system will enable other research laboratories, as well as other fields, to easily generate polymeric microbeads.”

Better ways to 3D print and bioprint emerge constantly as researchers innovate out of need for their own projects, and manufacturers are motivated by the need to replace and maintain parts, or many times, create completely new 3D printed components that would not have been possible previously. What do you think of this news? Let us know your thoughts! Join the discussion of this and other 3D printing topics at 3DPrintBoard.com.

[Source / Images: ‘Open-source 3D printed air-jet for generating monodispersed alginate microhydrogels’]

 

The post Innovative Open-Source 3D Printable Air-Jet System Creates Alginate Hydrogels appeared first on 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing.

Swansea University use Artec 3D scanners to save sealife

A marine biology project led by students at the University of Swansea has used 3D scanners from award winning company Artec 3D to create full body 3D scans of dolphins, sharks, and large turtles. The 3D models produced enabled the design and customization of tags which gather data on the speed and activity levels of the animal, […]

Autodesk releases generative design addons for 3D modelling software Fusion 360

Award-winning multinational software company Autodesk has released new add-ons for its entry-level 3D modeling software Fusion 360. Among the latest updates is a cost estimation tool combined with generative design. The add-on is powered by Massachusetts-based by aPriori Technologies, a cost management software maker. Stephanie Feraday, the president and CEO of aPriori Technologies, said, “This partnership with Autodesk […]

PyPortal Outlet Wall Mount – @adskfusion360 Tutorial

Designing a parametrically driven mounting plate for the Adafruit PyPortal.

Download Design Files:
https://learn.adafruit.com/pyportal-wall-mount

Get Adafruit PyPortal
https://adafru.it/4116

Shop for parts for your own DIY projects http://adafru.it/

Join the Adafruit Discord http://adafru.it/discord

3D Printing Projects Playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjF7R1fz_OOWD2dJNRIN46uhMCWvNOlbG

3D Hangout Show Playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjF7R1fz_OOVgpmWevin2slopw_A3-A8Y

Layer by Layer CAD Tutorials Playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjF7R1fz_OOVsMp6nKnpjsXSQ45nxfORb

Timelapse Tuesday Playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjF7R1fz_OOVagy3CktXsAAs4b153xpp_

2019 3D Printing Industry Awards update Software Application of the Year

Didn’t win an Oscar this weekend? Never mind, the 2019 3D Printing Awards is coming on June 6th, celebrating the greatest achievements in additive manufacturing over the past year. Nominations for this year’s 3D Printing Industry Awards close March 1, 2019, so there’s only a few days left to share your contributions before we share […]

Interview with Alexander Oster of Autodesk

Alexander Oster is an extremely knowledgeable 3D printing person. If we’re looking at mesh repair or 3D printing files & software I’d consider Alexander the number one person worldwide. He also has a lot of manufacturing experience and this combined with his thorough knowledge of 3D printing software means he’s a veritable one man army in 3D printing. Alexander got started at one of the first 3D Printing service bureaus FIT (who pioneered SLA prototyping, prosthetics and manufacturing with 3D printing) singlehandedly wrote most of Netfabb and worked on some of the earliest 3D printing checking and pricing software. When Netfabb was acquired by Autodesk he moved to the company to become their Director of Additive Manufacturing. Alex is a great guy as well and has some very real nuanced insight to share with us.

Alexander Oster

How did you get into 3D printing? 

I came in contact with 3D printers for the first time in 1998, when I had a student job at a local company that acted as Prototyping Service Provider for the Southern German Automotive Industry. At the time, they used this completely new and mind-blowing technology called Stereolithography in order to make prototypes and molds for investment casting.

The new thing about this method was that overnight it transformed the old craftmanship of model-making into a completely digital and high-tech activity – and there was almost no existing software stack available that would support this change. I had a good chunk of experience in programming 3D games, experience which we leveraged to help write a lot of in house software to keep the process working and efficient.
This company, FIT AG, still exists today and has become one of the premier additive contract manufacturers in Europe.

You wrote one of the first online software for 3D printing, what was that like? 

Back in 2004, we mostly focused on the Design and Manufacturing of latticed part geometries years before everybody else sold this as “news”. For example, at the annual Euromold trade show 2006 we had a real size (about 3x3x3 meter) latticed tree on display – which was printed in Nylon and very lightweight due to its nature-inspired internal geometries.

It was unthinkable to do this in a CAD system at the time, so we had to find some shortcuts to directly create laser paths for use by the EOS plastic systems to handle the data appropriately.

But for our original geometry representation we still used (as did everybody else) triangles that were stored in the STL format. As this created a lot of instabilities and handling problems, we were forced to develop repair and fixing algorithms to mediate that. At this point, we did not make a commercially sellable product, but it was enough to be useful for others. So we released it as cloud service, and then cooperated with the newly founded Shapeways to streamline their customer upload process.

By coincidence this was also the time when the RepRap project and especially a small New York startup called Makerbot set out to make 3D Printing a known technology for the masses. Like in the industrial world, each one of those new 3D Printer users had a dire need to process all kinds of broken and invalid geometry files from a plethora sources – and this made the netfabb Cloud Services quite popular.
After a few years, we were very honored and excited that Microsoft took up the service as one of the first on their Azure platform; and connected it to the newly released Windows 10, with its built-in 3D Builder app.

You also wrote Netfabb, how has its functionality expanded? 

Netfabb was the desktop version of this cloud service, and today has grown from a small tool that prepared STL files for 3D printing to a fully blown end to end solution for Additive Manufacturing. Particularly since our acquisition by Autodesk, we were able to quickly leverage the full force of a software giant and incorporate CAD kernels, Metal Process Simulation, Finite Element Solver, and advanced cloud capabilities. The whole software is now a puzzle piece in the much larger Autodesk Manufacturing world consisting of top-end vertical solutions for all each imaginable process of Digital Manufacturing – whether it be CNC operations (Autodesk PowerMill), composite manufacturing and cutting (Autodesk TruNest), or injection molding simulation (Autodesk MoldFlow).

This broadness of capabilities makes the Autodesk solution portfolio very unique in the market, and our tiered packaging model really has changed various developments in the industry. For example, at an entry-level price of only 200 US dollars per year we directly support hundreds of different 3D printers, affordable providing everybody in an organization access to 3D Printing data preparation. At the same time our high-end manufacturing and simulation solutions power the most advanced industrial applications on the planet.

What has changed in 3D printing industry during the time you were involved with it? Is the software landscape different now?

The major change between today and a decade ago is that nowadays a lot of large industrial players are investing huge amounts of capital, and new startups easily receive millions of dollars of venture funding with a well-presented idea that only exists on paper.

I am not sure if this is as bad as in other areas like Blockchain or Artificial Intelligence – but it has in my opinion skewed the market quite a lot and we are often seeing behind the scenes new entrants that are remaking all the mistakes that have already been made 10 years ago. This sometimes makes one feel sorry for all the lost money, but it also ensures that life stays exciting and it is not absolute that the most capital equipped player will in the end win the market.

From a software perspective, we are basically seeing what some people have predicted long time ago, which is basically the fact that the major large CAD vendors moved in and are incorporating 3D printing solutions into their products – and will in the long term dominate the software field. This is kind of unavoidable due to the important link between the design process of parts and the manufacturability constraints that naturally come with Additive Manufacturing.

What are Autodesk’s plans with 3D printing? 

In addition to all of our Netfabb activities, I am specifically excited about our movement to integrate our manufacturing capabilities into Fusion 360. Fusion 360 is Autodesk’s next generation cloud-connected Design-to-Make platform, supporting all steps of the product development process, from conceptual design, mechanical design, CAE, CAM, and data management. And all of this backed by a cloud system that makes collaboration across different continents as effective as sitting next to each other.

A few months ago, we have released the first iteration of our Metal Additive capabilities inside of Fusion 360. Next to the established Fusion CAM module, this gives an amazing in-CAD experience for the user to quickly get from a design environment to a print ready file within seconds, and at the same time create the CNC postprocessing operation for the same part.

It is truly exciting to see the possibilities and the convergence of the design process of a product with the downstream manufacturing chain. And all of this in one place and in an associative way – which means once there is a change done upstream to the original design the manufacturing instructions are automatically updated accordingly. And all of this can be accessed at a subscription prices that will open up those capabilities to a vast group of designers and engineers who could not have afforded a fraction of capabilities before.

What do you see as the major roadblocks to 3D printing adoption?

While a lot of people still think about the quality aspects of Additive Manufacturing as the main issue, in my opinion the problem is more that the current cost structure of the technologies is far too expensive to make them viable in the mainstream. If the costs per part would be significantly lower, a lot of applications would open up where the quality problems we are seeing would be less relevant – casting for example has at least as many issues as additive, but is viable and widely used.

A lot of companies today are trying to reduce the costs by increasing production speed. This certainly helps, but in my opinion the real elephant in the room is the capital investment needed to really make use of the technology. You can easily find an entry level CNC equipment, and industrial robot or a state of the art injection molding machine for less than 50.000 US dollars, but one still requires millions of dollars to set up an efficient Additive Manufacturing operation, and even more millions to train engineers to properly take advantage of the process. Based on the amount of capital, this often means a lot of produced parts must be producted in order to amortize and therefore creates a high barrier for applications that are most suitable for 3D printing (i.e. the ones that have a low life time unit count).

The big democratization of 3D Printing has already occurred for stereolithography and FDM market, and I am sure we will also see it for the more industrial technologies too. And it will finally make the technology mainstream enough that the knowledge about them becomes ubiquitous.

What advice would you give me if I was an industrial company wanting to get started with 3D printing?

Do not invest millions of dollars in a in house technology park that will be outdated in a few years. Rather invest the money in product development together with a manufacturing partner and design consultants that can train you how to apply 3D Printing in the best way for your application.

How do you think that 3D printing could make a real impact on companies bottom lines?

I think this is not the right question, as this is always suggesting that we will build current products just a little bit cheaper when we 3D print them. In my opinion, the real question is much more which developments will not happen and which new businesses cannot be built without a major contribution of 3D Printing technology. And there the list is quite extensive.

I do not believe patient-specific implants are feasible without 3D Printing. I also believe there will be no walking robots without 3D printed components and no flying taxis. Or if you look at the current developments in the aerospace industry, we will not go to Mars without Additive Manufacturing involved, nor will we achieve environmentally sustainable air travel. Climate Change challenges, in general, will be very hard to tackle. If you look at the construction market for example, the amount of buildings the world needs to build in the coming decades for the billions of people moving into the middle class is mind-blowing. Neither enough resources nor the human capacity exists today to achieve this without destroying the planet. I do not believe that this will work out without proper automation, and advances in robotics and 3D printing will certainly play a key role in this. Dubai for example recently passed a law that 25% of its new buildings need to be 3D printed by 2025.
Independent how that will turn out, the future certainly will be exciting.

Maker Publishes Instructables About 3D Printing Favorite Vintage Games

Whenever I visit Target to pick up something in the toy department, whether it’s a present for my nieces or one of my friends’ kids, I also enjoy stopping in the tiny section at the end that features retro toys, such as the old Fisher Price record player and the classic sock monkey doll. I don’t know what it is…there’s just something about seeing retro toys and other vintage items showcased in a more modern setting.

Maker and Instructables member Mike Gardi gets it – he recently used 3D printing to recreate two of his favorite educational games from the 1960s that are so rare, not to mention expensive, that there’s no way you’d find them anywhere remotely near a mainstream store like Target. His labor of love was detailed in a recent Hackaday post by Tom Nardi.

“Seeing that the educational games which helped put him on a long and rewarding career in software development are now nearly unobtainable, he decided to try his hand at recreating them on his 3D printer,” Nardi wrote. “With his keen eye for detail and personal love of these incredible toys, he’s preserved them in digital form for future generations to enjoy.”

The first game Gardi recreated was “The Amazing Dr. Nim,” which was invented by John Thomas Godfrey and manufactured by Education Science Research (E.S.R., Inc.). According to his Instructable on 3D printing the game, a plastic, injection-molded mechanical Digi-Comp II digital computer is used as a game board, which chooses its moves through “the action of the marbles falling through the levers of the machine.”

“I would be remiss if I didn’t mention that I was inspired by the excellent Digi-Comp I replica created by Mark Ziemer,” Gardi commented on the Hackaday post.

Bits of data are held in memory switches, and several levers, which are affected by released marbles, program the unit. The starting position is set by three levers, and the fourth is an equalizer: if it’s set and the player doesn’t make any mistakes, they win. The final lever shows whose turn it is.

Gardi modeled his replica game using both Fusion 360 and Tinkercad, and while he needed to scale down his version so it would fit on a desktop 3D printer, it was otherwise pretty faithful; however, he did use 10 mm steel ball bearings instead of marbles.

“One other concession was to 3D print the folding stand rather than attempting to employ the wire stand of the original,” Gardi wrote.

He 3D printed all of the parts at a resolution of 0.2 mm out of PLA. While the base unit was printed with 20% infill, everything else was printed at 100%, and Gardi included the STL files for all of the parts in his Instructable. Tools needed to put the game together include tweezers, glue, fine grit sandpaper, and a hobby knife.

Gardi also made a 3D printed version of the “Think-a-Dot” puzzle game, which was invented by Joseph A. Weisbecker and also uses mechanical flip-flops. These levers are used to change the color of the eight dots on the game’s front panel.

When the player drops marbles into the three holes at the top of game board, they can create different patterns by changing the colors of the dots. The winner is the person who can determine the fewest amount of marbles that are necessary to create specific patterns found in the game manual.

“I tell people that I did the modelling with digital calipers, Tinkercad, and patience,” Gardi wrote in his Instructable for the Think-a-Dot replica. “I thoroughly enjoyed the whole process. Tinkercad is a very organic experience and it felt more like sculpting to me than 3D design.”

While most of the pieces were 3D printed in PLA, Gardi used PETG to print the eight flip-flops. He also digitized the experience of owning these classic games by creating scans of the manuals, and then had them professionally printed and bound just like they would have been in the ’60s.

“This is really a fascinating way of preserving physical objects, and we’re interested to see if it catches on with other toys and games which otherwise might be lost to time,” Nardi concluded. “As storage capacities get higher and our ability to digitize the world around us improve, we suspect more and more of our physical world will get “backed up” onto the Internet.”

Discuss this story and other 3D printing topics at 3DPrintBoard.com or share your thoughts in the Facebook comments below.

Make the Perfect 3D Printed Accessory for Your New Year’s Eve Party

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again now – I’m a sucker for a good New Year’s Eve party. I’ve been to fancy themed parties, parties where everyone was in jeans and t-shirts, and even a pajama party. Today, I’m focusing on everyone’s favorite New Year’s Eve party accessories: the 3D printed variety, of course. Rather than giving you a summary of great 3D printed NYE decorations, we’re talking mostly about apparel, along with a few other items, that will make you look like the most tech-savvy Belle (or Bill) of the ball.

2019 Happy New Year Fun Glasses


Starting things off right with everyone’s favorite New Year’s Eve accessory – those silly glasses in the shape of the year we’re about to begin. Thingiverse designer Auggie is back with the 2019 version, which features two arms with rugged hinges and glasses that are easy on the skin of both your nose and your ears.

“I printed the arms with black PLA at 220 degrees and 45 degrees bed,” Auggie wrote. “The Glasses themselves I printed them with white PETG at 345 degrees and 100 degrees bed. Fill is 10% and no need for supports because they are already in the uploaded STL file. Don’t forget to cut them off before inserting the arms.”

Auggie writes that Gorilla Glue will help to secure the arms of the glasses in place. In addition, if you’re interested in painting the numbers on the glasses in different colors, you’ll want to ensure a good color base by 3D printing them in a white material. To really go all out for the new year, add some glitter to your glasses!

For another option, check out this New Years 2019 Glasses version by Cults3D user A_Skewed_View_3D.

Earrings 2019

Another oldie but goodie is this pair of earrings by Thingiverse user catf that have been updated for the year 2019. If you’re in need of a quick accessory for your party tonight, these are perfect, as it only takes 15 minutes to 3D print the set. The length is 6.2 cm, with a width of 1.3 cm and a thickness of 2 mm. The 3D printing parameters for these cute 2019 earrings are listed as the following:

  • 20% print speed not too fast for better rendering
  • 100% filling rate sufficient for jewelry
  • 215 ° PLA printing temperature
  • 60 ° plateau temperature
  • 0.1 layer thickness
  • 0.8 shell thickness

Headband New Year 2019

MyMiniFactory user Zeljan Ban created this cute 3D printable headband, which shows the transition from 2018 to 2019. This is another quick print, as it only takes 45 minutes from start to finish, and the headband and the number 8 were 3D printed in whit Anet A8 material, with a 0.2 mm layer height and a print speed of 50. The numbers 2, 0, 1, and 9 were 3D printed in red for a nice contrast, and even feature some holiday sparkles.

Fancy Bow Tie Version One

Cults3D user BonGarcon wants to make sure you look your best for your New Year’s Eve party (or parties) with this dapper bow tie, which can be 3D printed in a variety of colors to match your festive outfit…puttin’ on the Ritz, indeed.

New Years Vase – 2019

If you’re in need of a thoughtful gift to give your hostess tonight, look no further than this lovely, simple 2019 vase, designed in Fusion 360 and 3D printed in deep purple by MyMiniFactory user thom lamourine. You won’t need any supports to print this vase, though you will need to utilize a spiral/vase mode.

Bubbly Champagne Cookie Cutter

You could also be the guest that impresses by bringing a batch of cookies you made from scratch (or a boxed mix, no judgement here) shaped like exploding champagne bottles, courtesy of this cute print from Cults3D user oogime. Just make sure you use a food-safe filament.

Happy New Year Keychain 2019

Cults3D user LaurentRiviere created this adorable 2019 key ring “to remember the new year!” You’ll need to pause the print job at the 11th layer to change the color from black to white for the full effect, and remember – if you’ve had too much to drink or are too tired to drive home at the end of the night, make sure the keys attached to this key ring go in your pocket, not your ignition, and call an Uber instead.

3DPrint.com wishes everyone a safe and happy New Year’s Eve!

Will you try making any of these 3D prints? Discuss this and other 3D printing topics at 3DPrintBoard.com or share your thoughts below.