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/02_module-1-what-is-3d-printing
/03_3d-printing-facts-concepts
/06_3d-printing-applications.en.txt
| [MUSIC] Now, let's take a look at applications. How 3D printers are being used. The next course in our specialization | |
| will delve in more detail on this topic. So just wanted to give | |
| you a few examples here. At present, 3D printers are being | |
| used by many firms, not only for prototyping objects, but | |
| also for manufacturing them. For example, General Electric uses 3D | |
| printing to make thousands of parts for its jet engines. Also, Nike is working on | |
| making 3D printed shoes. And Loco Motors, a car company, | |
| recently 3D printed an actual car. In the US, most hearing aids and | |
| dental implants are 3D printed. And several universities and firms are working on technologies that may | |
| some day produced 3D printed human organs. For example, | |
| the University of Louisville recently announced that they hope to 3D | |
| print a human heart by 2023. We'll discuss this and | |
| several other 3D printing applications, in the second week of our course. Although, most desktop 3D printers will | |
| never make a car or a human heart, there are still lots of amazing things | |
| that could be made using low cost, desktop 3D printing technology. Provide some stories of what our | |
| students who come to our lab are using this technology | |
| to make everyday. We'll discuss this in | |
| the second week of our course. If you complete the specialization, | |
| you will be able to design and create things that you probably | |
| haven't even begun to imagine yet. That help guide you into how to think | |
| about the things that you can make using a 3D printer, please take a look at this | |
| 3D typology which I developed a couple years ago with one of our doctoral | |
| students as a way of thinking about, what these tools can make. So my doctoral student and | |
| I examined 500 different objects that had been posted on the website, | |
| thingiverse.com. And we tried to classify these | |
| objects using a typology. So what you see here is the typology. It has two axis resulting | |
| in four categories. The first axis, | |
| the horizontal axis, is the type of product whether it's a new product or | |
| an existing product. The second axis, | |
| the vertical axis, is the degree to which the product is a standalone | |
| object that just works by itself. Or a component or | |
| a piece of a larger object. So we combine these two axis | |
| we have these four archetypes. So going from the top left, | |
| we have creations and what you see here is a grading dice. And this is a dice that has | |
| different grades, A, B, C and D and also a couple others. And this is an example | |
| of a new object that you wouldn't be able to buy in a store. And it works by itself, | |
| you just toss a dice so it's standalone. Moving to the right, we have the next | |
| category which are substitutes and they are simply objects that | |
| you could buy in a store. Instead of buying in a store, you would | |
| print it on your desktop, for example. So here we're showing a whistle. So for example, although you could buy a | |
| whistle in the store, if you were coaching your son's soccer game and | |
| it was 6 AM and the store was closed and you needed a whistle, printing it would | |
| be a convenient way to obtain it. The next category down to the right | |
| is something we call replacements. And what you see here on the right is | |
| this knob on the right was 3D printed for an old stove. And so, lots of things that | |
| we have something breaks and it's hard to find a replacement object. And now if you have a digital design or if you want to sketch the object in | |
| a 3D modeling program such as SketchUp, or perhaps even scan the broken piece, | |
| you can now print a replacement object. And the final category on the bottom left | |
| is something that we call solutions. And what you see here is | |
| a solution to a problem of trying to integrate two | |
| different toy systems. So this is called a duplo | |
| brio connector and the bottom it connects | |
| with Lego duplo blocks. And on the top across the top | |
| is the brio train track. So this connector allows you to | |
| integrate this two different but in compatible toy systems, | |
| so those are solutions. So we develop this classification and then | |
| we randomly picked 500 different objects on Thingiverse, and then independently | |
| my student and I each try to classify these 500 objects into 1 | |
| of these 4 different boxes. So what do you think we found? Which category had the most objects? Well, let's take a look at that. So as you see here in this next slide that | |
| by far and away the biggest category, over half of these objects, | |
| work creations, and you see the percentages for | |
| the other three categories? And this is interesting because | |
| we have to think of 3D printer as creating existing products, | |
| and some individuals will say, why would I want to make my own whistle | |
| when I can buy within the store, well perhaps you couldn't | |
| if the store was an open? But that's really missing the point, | |
| the key point here is that 3D printing allows us to create new objects | |
| that have never been seen before. So the fact that the majority | |
| of these objects, 51% are creations is really interesting. This suggests that people | |
| are using 3D printers to create new-to-the-world products | |
| that have never existed before, and this is really the magic of 3D printing. I hope this typology has been | |
| useful in helping you think about the sort of things you can | |
| make with a 3D printer. As you can see, 3D printers can make | |
| a variety of objects, both those that have already existed as well as those that | |
| have never ever been made before. The possibilities are endless and the use of this technology is | |
| as broad as your imagination. I hope this overview of 3D printing has | |
| provided you with a better understanding of how you can put your imagination into | |
| action, and turn your ideas into objects. [MUSIC] |