Printing specialist targets £3m sales

A 3D printing specialist is targeting a £3m opportunity after launching a new CNC milling tool that will offer manufacturers “the best of both worlds”.

Rapid Fusion, which employs eight people at its recently opened Exeter R&D centre, has created a high-performance electro spindle that will provide precision milling and post-processing of polymer 3D prints.

The tool will be ideal for high-quality moulds across a range of industries, such as automotive, aerospace and marine applications, where speed to market is increasingly important.

“This CNC milling tool has the potential to be a real game changer for manufacturers and has been designed in partnership with a number of end users to ensure we deliver exactly what they need,” said Martin Jewell, R&D director at Rapid Fusion.

“3D printing can give unrivalled speed and creates moulds near net shape, within 3 to 4mm. Certain applications need even greater precision and this is where you can call in a CNC milling tool to remove the excess material. Going forward, we’ll be able to offer this in one turnkey solution.

“The advantages are huge. We now know we can deliver repeatable quality, and, on one trial project, we reduced the lead time for a mould tool from six to eight weeks to just five days. That is some saving.

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“Our CNC milling tool comes equipped with a tool changer, allowing users to swap between it and the 3D printing pellet extruder on a robot set-up. It can also efficiently handle engineering-grade materials, such as glass and carbon-filled PEI and peek polymers.”

Rapid Fusion, a sister business of 3D printing hardware specialist EVO 3D, is committed to becoming a major player in additive manufacturing platforms – all designed, built and assembled in the UK.

It launched its first bespoke cell, Apollo, earlier this year and this has already received significant interest for its ability to offer faster speeds than existing FDM printers (nearly 200 times quicker).

The company is just a few months away from releasing a second cell that will include the CNC milling tool, with orders already placed by a 3D printing production specialist in the UK and a construction supplier in the EU.

It is estimated that this new technology alone could generate up to £3m of annual revenue and is completely designed, developed and manufactured in the South West.

 

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