Page 17 - 3D Metal Printing Fall 2019
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  3D
   RPG customer D&D Classic Automotive
Restoration called on the firm to reproduce the
carburetor case for a 1938 Steyr automobile, of which
only six remain in the world. RPG used its Metal X 3D printer to create the cover from 17-4 PH stainless steel in two pieces. After sintering, a little deburring, secondary hole tapping and light grinding of mating surfaces, it will be ready for installation. Shown here: the original carburetor cover, coated to enable 3D scanning (top); and the carburetor cover printed in composite to prove the concept.
business from existing customers for the Metal X,” Ginsburg says, “but also believed that 3D metal printing would bring new customers through the door.”
Immediate Success With the Printer
...came from a customer that manu- factures radio-controlled vehicles, which replaced some injection-molded plastic parts with more durable 3D printed metal parts. More recently, Ginsburg and his team have been working on a project with car-restoration company D&D Classic Automotive Restoration, Covington, OH. Deep into restoring a 1938 Steyr automo- bile, one of only six remaining in the world, D&D sought help from Ginsburg in manufacturing a replacement carbu- retor cover, “the perfect legacy-type com- ponent for the Metal X,” says Ginsburg.
The process starts with white-light scanning the existing part to create a 3D model, describes Ginsburg, and then cleaning the model up in CAD to generate the STL file for the 3D printer. Moving from CAD to the print file “is fast and seamless,” he says, due to the intuitive and easy-to-use Eiger cloud-based 3D printing software from Markforged. Con- tributing to the seamlessness of the
process are newer features in Eiger that allow the user to rotate (automatically or manually) the part so that any face or plane will lie flat against the print bed, as the geometry allows. The automatic rota- tion tool then will detect if any features will generate beneath the surface of the print bed, and adjust part orientation to find a parallel plane to place against the print bed and make the part printable.
RPG is printing the part—3.5 by 3.5 by 6 in.—in two pieces, from 17-4 PH stain- less steel. After sintering, a little deburring, secondary hole tapping and light grinding of mating surfaces, the parts are ready for assembly and installation.
Expecting Solid Growth
“In addition to 17-4 PH, we’re also printing mold inserts from H13 tool steel,” says Ginsburg, “and we are looking for- ward to printing parts in all available materials. By year-end, we expect additive manufacturing to comprise 10 percent of our business, and eventually grow to 25 to 30 percent. One current job has us look- ing at printing robotic end-of-arm tooling for pick-and-place applications.
“We always strive to stay at the leading edge of technology,” Ginsburg adds, “and that’s where metal 3D printing fits.”3DMP
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