3D Printing News Briefs: October 14, 2019

In today’s 3D Printing News Briefs, everything is new, new, new! Carbon is announcing a new RPU 130 material, and STERNE Elastomere introduces its antimicrobial silicone 3D printing. Protolabs launches a new polypropylene 3D printing service in Europe, and Hydra Research has officially released its flagship Nautilus 3D printer.

Carbon Introduces RPU 130 Material

At this week’s International K Trade Fair in Dusseldorf, Carbon will debut its new RPU 130 resin, a rigid polyurethane that’s rigid, tough, impact resistant, and stands up under high temperatures, making it a perfect choice for the automotive industry in applications such as brake caliper covers. Made exclusively for Carbon’s Digital Light Synthesis, the dual-cure engineering resin is comparable to unfilled thermoplastics, and Carbon also partnered with DuPont Tate & Lyle Bio Products to make RPU 130 out of sustainable Susterra propanediol, a 100% bio-based material that uses 46% less nonrenewable energy from cradle-to-gate and produces 48% less greenhouse gas emissions as well.

“We are focused on ways to incorporate more sustainable approaches to developing materials, and our partnership with DuPont Tate & Lyle emphasizes that commitment,” stated Jason Rolland, SVP of Materials at Carbon. “We believe that sustainability can go hand-in-hand with improved performance. In the case of RPU 130, we believe it will make the material even more appealing for our customers, as it makes it possible to create better quality products that are also ultimately better for the environment.”

You can learn more about Carbon’s new RPU 130 at its K-Show booth, H7.2, F12 from October 16-23.

Antimicrobial Silicone 3D Printing by STERNE

French silicone 3D printing specialist STERNE will also be attending K 2019 this month. Three years ago, the company unveiled its silicone 3D printer at K 2016, and its SiO-shaping 3D silicone printing technology makes it possible to fabricate very small pieces, according to standard ISO 3302-01 :2014 (M2) tolerances, at hardness from 30 to 60 Shores A. The printer also offers a full panel of colors in opaque, phosphorescent, and translucent.

The company is now combining 3D printing with antimicrobial silicone, in order to keep the silicone odor-free, avoid bacteria developing, improve the hygiene of a 3D printed object, and strengthen its immune barrier as well. You can learn more about this antimicrobial silicone 3D printing at STERNE’s Stand E23, Hall 8A, at K 2019.

Protolabs Offering Polypropylene 3D Printing in Europe

For the first time, digital manufacturing company Protolabs is offering polypropylene 3D printing, with the launch of a new service in Europe. The company has invested a lot in developing the material to be used with selective laser sintering (SLS) technology, on an SPro 60 system. SLS 3D printing with polypropylene plastic allows design engineers to rapidly develop and test prototypes, and fabricate complex designs as well, like internal channels and honeycomb structures.

“Polypropylene is one of the most used plastics available to modern manufacturers and is widely used for a number of applications. Polypropylene is one of the most used plastics available to modern manufacturers and is widely used for a number of applications. Now that we can produce a prototype in polypropylene, design engineers can develop and test it in an application using the same material that it will be manufactured from. The product design can then be quickly reiterated and retested until they have the perfect solution, before committing to tooling. This breakthrough takes product development to the next level using the most versatile of plastics, ” said Andrea Landoni, 3D printing product manager for Protolabs.

“Before, if you wanted to use polypropylene then you were limited in what you could design by the manufacturing technology available to you. Now the only limitation is your imagination.”

Hydra Research Releases Flagship 3D Printer

Oregon company Hydra Research, which began in a closet three years ago as a peer-to-peer print service, has announced the release of it flagship 3D printer, the Nautilus. The fully enclosed, industrial-grade desktop system – assembled in Portland – features a quick-change Tool Cartridge system that integrates E3D’s V6 hotend for fast nozzle switching, in addition to an integrated software solution. It also supports a variety of materials, provides Cura profiles for easy slicing, has a small footprint in a sleek frame, and offers customizable HydraCare support and consulting packages

“As a company, our primary goal is producing world-class hardware on an open source platform,” explained John Kray, the Founder and CEO of Hydra Research. “Manufacturers like E3D, Duet3D, and Fillamentum combine these values perfectly.”

You can now purchase Hydra’s Nautilus 3D printer on the company’s website, in addition to spare parts, accessories, and filament.

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Sterne Bringing Silicone 3D Printing to COMPAMED Trade Fair

Sterne Elastomere, a company located in the south of France, specializes in manufacturing items out of silicone materials for industries such as food and drink, mass transit, medical, nuclear, and pharmaceuticals and cosmetics. Two years ago, Sterne made its move into the 3D printing world and debuted its SiO-Shaping 1601 silicone 3D printer at K 2016, a top plastics and rubber trade show, for the first time.

In order to provide its clients with 3D printed silicone prototypes that possessed properties similar to that of the final product, Sterne developed its technology so it could deposit filaments of 100% UV-cured silicone. It’s definitely not easy to 3D print with silicone, due to properties that make it unable to be heated and extruded in the same way that typical thermoplastic materials can be, but companies like Sterne, Wacker Chemie, and Fripp Design Research have been making great strides over the last few years.

Over the last two years, Sterne, which has over 20 years of experience in the silicone industry, has been working hard to refine its 3D printing silicone technology, so it can be a viable alternative option for customers looking to meet their technical needs. Now the company is bringing its SiO-shaping 3D silicone printing method to COMPAMED 2018, a trade fair for medical suppliers and manufacturers which begins in a little over a week in Düsseldorf, Germany.

According to a release by the company, “Sterne is able to manufacture little to medium series on projects dedicated to 3D printing. An approved solution for pieces with a need situated between molding and extrusion technics, on specific applications both medical and short term implantable. Now, it is only in one step that devices with complex and atypical forms can be produced. A research and development department composed of 3D specialists and engineers, go with clients on project development and monitoring, perpetuating new concepts and ideas. A quick manufacturing on competitive deadlines since no design or validation of tools is necessary.”

The company’s SiO 3D silicone printing has been further refined since it was first introduced. In 2016, it promised a minimum 3D print layer height of 0.25 mm, but can now achieve a minimum of 0.1 mm (100 microns). Its SiO-Shaping 1601 silicone 3D printer offers a maximum print volume of 205 x 200 x 100 mm, along with hardness from 30 to 60 Shores A.

Sterne’s silicone 3D printing can help all of its customers with their fast prototyping needs. But its specialty is manufacturing thin, accurate silicone products for the medical sector that meet the necessary aesthetic and technical needs.

“Whether High Consistency Silicone Rubber (HCR) or Liquid Silicone Rubber (LSR), Sterne masters a large range of manufacturing process such as extrusion, molding, making, over-molding inside ISO 6, ISO 7 and ISO 8 cleanrooms,” the company’s release states.

In addition, Sterne’s SiO silicone 3D printing also offers a full panel of colors, including phosphorescent, translucent, and opaque, which is available for colors like red, yellow, black, and green. However, these colors are only available for materials that meet the necessary quality requirements according to the FDA or USP class VI medical grade.

You can see the company’s silicone 3D printing prowess for yourself at COMPAMED from November 12-15 in the Düsseldorf exhibition center. To rediscover, or see for the first time, Sterne’s range of products for the medical sector, visit the company at Stand L02 in Hall 08b.

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