Hear from Actuonix, R5 Training, and Johnson & Johnson on how they leverage additive manufacturing technology from R&D and product design to short-run production. Plus see how Actuonix shortened their product iteration cycle from 6 weeks to 2 days and saved thousands in the process. And they opened up new revenue streams from customers where minimum order quantity was a barrier before by partnering with them on low-volume 3D printing through high-volume injection molding.
We’ll also give you a look at our latest additive manufacturing innovations – from brand-new printers to software, engineering & biocompatible materials, and more.
👇 WATCH THE FULL WEBINAR HERE 👇
Senior Engineer at Jonson & Johnson shares more about the trend of miniaturization in the medical device industry, as well as which applications he's leveraging micro scale 3D printing for.
See the difference in product iteration time, cost per part run, total production capacity, accessibility, and opportunities when you outsource vs. bring 3D printing in-house with B9Creations tech.
Actuonix Motion Devices shares how additive manufacturing is enabling business growth and opening up new revenue streams from customers where minimum order quantity was a barrier before.
There are less limitations when designing a part for 3D printing. Wall thicknesses do not have to be consistent throughout the part, and they can also be much thinner than that of a part that is injection molded or machined. In addition to this, draft angles do not have to be considered like they do when designing for injection molding.