Can a 3D printer make a 3D printer?
$begingroup$
Could you use a 3D printer to make a 3D printer's parts? What is the most of a 3D printer that can be made this way? Could parts that break be replaced this way?
desktop-printer replacement-parts replicating-printers
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Could you use a 3D printer to make a 3D printer's parts? What is the most of a 3D printer that can be made this way? Could parts that break be replaced this way?
desktop-printer replacement-parts replicating-printers
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Could you use a 3D printer to make a 3D printer's parts? What is the most of a 3D printer that can be made this way? Could parts that break be replaced this way?
desktop-printer replacement-parts replicating-printers
$endgroup$
Could you use a 3D printer to make a 3D printer's parts? What is the most of a 3D printer that can be made this way? Could parts that break be replaced this way?
desktop-printer replacement-parts replicating-printers
desktop-printer replacement-parts replicating-printers
edited Jan 12 at 20:42
Trish
5,69711239
5,69711239
asked Dec 29 '18 at 19:33
MuzeMuze
1395
1395
add a comment |
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Yes, you can print most of the parts (electronics, linear guide rails, ball bearings and nuts and bolts, etc cannot be printed). Actually this was exactly the purpose of RepRap.org:
RepRap is humanity's first general-purpose self-replicating
manufacturing machine.
and:
Since many parts of RepRap are made from plastic and RepRap prints
those parts, RepRap self-replicates by making a kit of itself - a kit
that anyone can assemble given time and materials.
There have been attempts in the past to even replicate the frames of printers (e.g. Dollo 3D or Snappy, but such designs are not very successful, printed frames are more flexible than metal frames.
I have built 2 custom printers myself using other printers to print parts and printed all printer parts for several others. It is possible to print your own linear bearings from POM, I prefer these over the noisy metal bearings.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Can a 3D printer make a 3D printer?
Not without a bunch of other parts
Could you use a 3D printer to make 3D printers parts?
To some extent.
What is the most of a 3D printer that can be built this way
Basically you you can't print the precision mechanical guides, you can't print the electronics, you can't print the parts that need to get hot, you can't print the motors, you can't print the lead-screws or toothed belts. Printing the whole main frame doesn't seem to be very practical either.
Afaict what you are left with is mostly printing the pieces that join all the functional elements of the printer together.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Yes, printers can print printer parts. With the right design, all non-metal/non-electronic parts can be printed on an FDM printer, and a laser-sintering based printer (SLS/DMLS) can even produce metal parts, as long as they fit the printbed. The fact, that a printer can create all the fastenings to build a new printer with just the electronics and linger extrusions/rods/rails is actually the core of the RepRap philosophy.
Some early printers, like the Mendel, did use just materials from home depot and printed joiners together with the electronics.
As a result, all joiners can be printed as replacements or improvements. There is a second limit though: Very small printers might not be able to print parts of the size needed to replicate the parts that they are made from. A common 200x200x200 mm printer can replicate almost all fasteners that comprise it, but the frame will have to be made from sheets of metal, wood, extrusions or rods and the movement system will need rails, rods or extrusions.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
You can print some of it but not all, as 3d printers can't print metal or silicon to make the boards and frame.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
a laser-sinter printer can print metal and ceramics, and TPU is a printable material close to silicon (the flexible material!). Some filaments are even conductive. But you can not print complex electronics.
$endgroup$
– Trish
Jan 12 at 18:16
$begingroup$
Also, you can't make the nozzle or any other metal parts
$endgroup$
– chess_lover_6
Jan 24 at 6:26
add a comment |
Your Answer
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Yes, you can print most of the parts (electronics, linear guide rails, ball bearings and nuts and bolts, etc cannot be printed). Actually this was exactly the purpose of RepRap.org:
RepRap is humanity's first general-purpose self-replicating
manufacturing machine.
and:
Since many parts of RepRap are made from plastic and RepRap prints
those parts, RepRap self-replicates by making a kit of itself - a kit
that anyone can assemble given time and materials.
There have been attempts in the past to even replicate the frames of printers (e.g. Dollo 3D or Snappy, but such designs are not very successful, printed frames are more flexible than metal frames.
I have built 2 custom printers myself using other printers to print parts and printed all printer parts for several others. It is possible to print your own linear bearings from POM, I prefer these over the noisy metal bearings.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Yes, you can print most of the parts (electronics, linear guide rails, ball bearings and nuts and bolts, etc cannot be printed). Actually this was exactly the purpose of RepRap.org:
RepRap is humanity's first general-purpose self-replicating
manufacturing machine.
and:
Since many parts of RepRap are made from plastic and RepRap prints
those parts, RepRap self-replicates by making a kit of itself - a kit
that anyone can assemble given time and materials.
There have been attempts in the past to even replicate the frames of printers (e.g. Dollo 3D or Snappy, but such designs are not very successful, printed frames are more flexible than metal frames.
I have built 2 custom printers myself using other printers to print parts and printed all printer parts for several others. It is possible to print your own linear bearings from POM, I prefer these over the noisy metal bearings.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Yes, you can print most of the parts (electronics, linear guide rails, ball bearings and nuts and bolts, etc cannot be printed). Actually this was exactly the purpose of RepRap.org:
RepRap is humanity's first general-purpose self-replicating
manufacturing machine.
and:
Since many parts of RepRap are made from plastic and RepRap prints
those parts, RepRap self-replicates by making a kit of itself - a kit
that anyone can assemble given time and materials.
There have been attempts in the past to even replicate the frames of printers (e.g. Dollo 3D or Snappy, but such designs are not very successful, printed frames are more flexible than metal frames.
I have built 2 custom printers myself using other printers to print parts and printed all printer parts for several others. It is possible to print your own linear bearings from POM, I prefer these over the noisy metal bearings.
$endgroup$
Yes, you can print most of the parts (electronics, linear guide rails, ball bearings and nuts and bolts, etc cannot be printed). Actually this was exactly the purpose of RepRap.org:
RepRap is humanity's first general-purpose self-replicating
manufacturing machine.
and:
Since many parts of RepRap are made from plastic and RepRap prints
those parts, RepRap self-replicates by making a kit of itself - a kit
that anyone can assemble given time and materials.
There have been attempts in the past to even replicate the frames of printers (e.g. Dollo 3D or Snappy, but such designs are not very successful, printed frames are more flexible than metal frames.
I have built 2 custom printers myself using other printers to print parts and printed all printer parts for several others. It is possible to print your own linear bearings from POM, I prefer these over the noisy metal bearings.
edited Dec 31 '18 at 7:35
answered Dec 29 '18 at 20:34
0scar0scar
12k31646
12k31646
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Can a 3D printer make a 3D printer?
Not without a bunch of other parts
Could you use a 3D printer to make 3D printers parts?
To some extent.
What is the most of a 3D printer that can be built this way
Basically you you can't print the precision mechanical guides, you can't print the electronics, you can't print the parts that need to get hot, you can't print the motors, you can't print the lead-screws or toothed belts. Printing the whole main frame doesn't seem to be very practical either.
Afaict what you are left with is mostly printing the pieces that join all the functional elements of the printer together.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Can a 3D printer make a 3D printer?
Not without a bunch of other parts
Could you use a 3D printer to make 3D printers parts?
To some extent.
What is the most of a 3D printer that can be built this way
Basically you you can't print the precision mechanical guides, you can't print the electronics, you can't print the parts that need to get hot, you can't print the motors, you can't print the lead-screws or toothed belts. Printing the whole main frame doesn't seem to be very practical either.
Afaict what you are left with is mostly printing the pieces that join all the functional elements of the printer together.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Can a 3D printer make a 3D printer?
Not without a bunch of other parts
Could you use a 3D printer to make 3D printers parts?
To some extent.
What is the most of a 3D printer that can be built this way
Basically you you can't print the precision mechanical guides, you can't print the electronics, you can't print the parts that need to get hot, you can't print the motors, you can't print the lead-screws or toothed belts. Printing the whole main frame doesn't seem to be very practical either.
Afaict what you are left with is mostly printing the pieces that join all the functional elements of the printer together.
$endgroup$
Can a 3D printer make a 3D printer?
Not without a bunch of other parts
Could you use a 3D printer to make 3D printers parts?
To some extent.
What is the most of a 3D printer that can be built this way
Basically you you can't print the precision mechanical guides, you can't print the electronics, you can't print the parts that need to get hot, you can't print the motors, you can't print the lead-screws or toothed belts. Printing the whole main frame doesn't seem to be very practical either.
Afaict what you are left with is mostly printing the pieces that join all the functional elements of the printer together.
answered Dec 30 '18 at 16:04
Peter GreenPeter Green
1712
1712
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Yes, printers can print printer parts. With the right design, all non-metal/non-electronic parts can be printed on an FDM printer, and a laser-sintering based printer (SLS/DMLS) can even produce metal parts, as long as they fit the printbed. The fact, that a printer can create all the fastenings to build a new printer with just the electronics and linger extrusions/rods/rails is actually the core of the RepRap philosophy.
Some early printers, like the Mendel, did use just materials from home depot and printed joiners together with the electronics.
As a result, all joiners can be printed as replacements or improvements. There is a second limit though: Very small printers might not be able to print parts of the size needed to replicate the parts that they are made from. A common 200x200x200 mm printer can replicate almost all fasteners that comprise it, but the frame will have to be made from sheets of metal, wood, extrusions or rods and the movement system will need rails, rods or extrusions.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Yes, printers can print printer parts. With the right design, all non-metal/non-electronic parts can be printed on an FDM printer, and a laser-sintering based printer (SLS/DMLS) can even produce metal parts, as long as they fit the printbed. The fact, that a printer can create all the fastenings to build a new printer with just the electronics and linger extrusions/rods/rails is actually the core of the RepRap philosophy.
Some early printers, like the Mendel, did use just materials from home depot and printed joiners together with the electronics.
As a result, all joiners can be printed as replacements or improvements. There is a second limit though: Very small printers might not be able to print parts of the size needed to replicate the parts that they are made from. A common 200x200x200 mm printer can replicate almost all fasteners that comprise it, but the frame will have to be made from sheets of metal, wood, extrusions or rods and the movement system will need rails, rods or extrusions.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Yes, printers can print printer parts. With the right design, all non-metal/non-electronic parts can be printed on an FDM printer, and a laser-sintering based printer (SLS/DMLS) can even produce metal parts, as long as they fit the printbed. The fact, that a printer can create all the fastenings to build a new printer with just the electronics and linger extrusions/rods/rails is actually the core of the RepRap philosophy.
Some early printers, like the Mendel, did use just materials from home depot and printed joiners together with the electronics.
As a result, all joiners can be printed as replacements or improvements. There is a second limit though: Very small printers might not be able to print parts of the size needed to replicate the parts that they are made from. A common 200x200x200 mm printer can replicate almost all fasteners that comprise it, but the frame will have to be made from sheets of metal, wood, extrusions or rods and the movement system will need rails, rods or extrusions.
$endgroup$
Yes, printers can print printer parts. With the right design, all non-metal/non-electronic parts can be printed on an FDM printer, and a laser-sintering based printer (SLS/DMLS) can even produce metal parts, as long as they fit the printbed. The fact, that a printer can create all the fastenings to build a new printer with just the electronics and linger extrusions/rods/rails is actually the core of the RepRap philosophy.
Some early printers, like the Mendel, did use just materials from home depot and printed joiners together with the electronics.
As a result, all joiners can be printed as replacements or improvements. There is a second limit though: Very small printers might not be able to print parts of the size needed to replicate the parts that they are made from. A common 200x200x200 mm printer can replicate almost all fasteners that comprise it, but the frame will have to be made from sheets of metal, wood, extrusions or rods and the movement system will need rails, rods or extrusions.
edited Jan 12 at 19:23
answered Dec 30 '18 at 1:43
TrishTrish
5,69711239
5,69711239
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
You can print some of it but not all, as 3d printers can't print metal or silicon to make the boards and frame.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
a laser-sinter printer can print metal and ceramics, and TPU is a printable material close to silicon (the flexible material!). Some filaments are even conductive. But you can not print complex electronics.
$endgroup$
– Trish
Jan 12 at 18:16
$begingroup$
Also, you can't make the nozzle or any other metal parts
$endgroup$
– chess_lover_6
Jan 24 at 6:26
add a comment |
$begingroup$
You can print some of it but not all, as 3d printers can't print metal or silicon to make the boards and frame.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
a laser-sinter printer can print metal and ceramics, and TPU is a printable material close to silicon (the flexible material!). Some filaments are even conductive. But you can not print complex electronics.
$endgroup$
– Trish
Jan 12 at 18:16
$begingroup$
Also, you can't make the nozzle or any other metal parts
$endgroup$
– chess_lover_6
Jan 24 at 6:26
add a comment |
$begingroup$
You can print some of it but not all, as 3d printers can't print metal or silicon to make the boards and frame.
$endgroup$
You can print some of it but not all, as 3d printers can't print metal or silicon to make the boards and frame.
answered Jan 12 at 17:16
chess_lover_6chess_lover_6
113
113
$begingroup$
a laser-sinter printer can print metal and ceramics, and TPU is a printable material close to silicon (the flexible material!). Some filaments are even conductive. But you can not print complex electronics.
$endgroup$
– Trish
Jan 12 at 18:16
$begingroup$
Also, you can't make the nozzle or any other metal parts
$endgroup$
– chess_lover_6
Jan 24 at 6:26
add a comment |
$begingroup$
a laser-sinter printer can print metal and ceramics, and TPU is a printable material close to silicon (the flexible material!). Some filaments are even conductive. But you can not print complex electronics.
$endgroup$
– Trish
Jan 12 at 18:16
$begingroup$
Also, you can't make the nozzle or any other metal parts
$endgroup$
– chess_lover_6
Jan 24 at 6:26
$begingroup$
a laser-sinter printer can print metal and ceramics, and TPU is a printable material close to silicon (the flexible material!). Some filaments are even conductive. But you can not print complex electronics.
$endgroup$
– Trish
Jan 12 at 18:16
$begingroup$
a laser-sinter printer can print metal and ceramics, and TPU is a printable material close to silicon (the flexible material!). Some filaments are even conductive. But you can not print complex electronics.
$endgroup$
– Trish
Jan 12 at 18:16
$begingroup$
Also, you can't make the nozzle or any other metal parts
$endgroup$
– chess_lover_6
Jan 24 at 6:26
$begingroup$
Also, you can't make the nozzle or any other metal parts
$endgroup$
– chess_lover_6
Jan 24 at 6:26
add a comment |
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