All posts tagged: laser rapid prototyping

Realize Sponsors High School Robotics Team

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Realize, Inc. is proud to support local science and technology students in the Indianapolis area. Recently we sponsored the Hamilton Southeastern High School Robotics Team. We talked with HSE Physics/Pre-Engineering Teacher Jeff Wilkins about the program.

 

 Tell me about the HSE Robotics Team, What does your team do?

HSE Robotics, aka Royal Robotics, started back in 2005. That year, my Principles of Engineering (POE) classes participated in BEST Robotics (www.bestinc.org) and the Digital Electronics (DE) class participated in Botball (www.botball.org). The robotics club at HSE now participates in the VEX Robotics Competition (www.vexrobotics.com) and has been competing since 2010. BEST Robotics requires students to make a robot out of common materials from scratch. Plywood, PVC and some sheet metal are the main materials used to create these robots. My Engineering Design and Development (EDD) class still participates in this competition to this day. Botball is a completely autonomous robotics competition that requires the team to build a robot out of a lego platform and an iCreate (from the company that brought us the Roomba, iRobot). Students have 8 weeks to design, build and program a robot to complete the task for the year. VEX Robotics is where our after school Robotics Club will compete. This competition uses materials that are used in the PLTW program and the parts and pieces are premade, so designing and assembling a robot is very quick and easy.

Why is this team important for students and the school?

We have over 50 students participating in Robotics Club this year, as well as, 22 students in EDD that are participating in the BEST Robotics Competition.

How did the Realize Sponsorship help your team?

Your generous donation allowed us to purchase a GCC Laserpro Spirit GX laser cutter which is used for fundraisers for robotics club and to cut the main chassis of our robots for the BEST Competition.
Team Picture

What do you love about Robotics?
Robotics is sports for geeks. It has all of the excitement, hard work, and practice of athletic sports and allows students to excel on a different playfield.

How can you see Robotics and 3D Printing working together in the future?
Yes, we will be using our 3D printer to create parts and pieces for an R2D2 that we will be building next semester. It allows someone to design the robot in a 3D modeling software and get a prototype very quickly without expensive and time consuming machining.

What do you think students need more information on regarding the additive manufacturing industry?
All of the different types that are available. Most just think of FDM because that is what we have at HSE, but there are so many other options out there.

If you could 3D Print anything, what would that be?

Well, since I own one, I can print about anything I want, but 3D printing a house out of concrete would be really cool. My favorite item to 3D print so far were a bunch of digital sculpts that the Tech Art Club at Fall Creek Intermediate students designed. They were very excited to get a physical model of what they had designed on their iPad’s using 123D Creature App.

 

*If you have any questions or are interested in sponsoring  you can contact Jeff.  [email protected]  317-594-4190 ext. 11521.

 

mereedRealize Sponsors High School Robotics Team
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Realize Featured Project: 3D Toilet

3D Toilet

3D Printed Toilet by Realize, Inc.

Realize Featured Project: The 3D Toilet

 

Here is a summary of this recent project from Realize, Inc. General Manager Brian Cazzell:

 

“The client needed a working SLA model of their toilet design to use at a trade show. The primary requirement was that it needed to be clear in order to demonstrate water flowing through the internal channels. Due to the platform size restraints of the SLA5000 machine, we needed to build the model in sections and create an inter-locking structure that when bonded together would maintain a water-tight seal for the duration of the trade show. The model also needed to be completely free of support material not only for aesthetic purposes but also to allow the water to flow freely through the channels. In the end, the client was very happy with the functionality and the overall fit and finish of this model.”

mereedRealize Featured Project: 3D Toilet
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The Realize Q&A with Steve Griffiths

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Steve Griffiths – Sales Manager, Materialise

Materialise_IYCCO Realize, Inc is communicating with 3D Printing experts from around the globe to discuss the future of our industry. We talked with Steve Griffiths the Sales Manager at Materialise to get his take on where things are headed in the additive manufacturing world. Steve manages a team of professionals at Materialise who are selling and supporting leading software technology in the 3D Printing Industry.

“3D printing is an amazing industry with great potential. It’s a great combination of the machines, materials, software and the people. I’m excited to see where it goes!”

 

 

Why has 3D Printing become the buzz word for the entire industry and do you think that is a good or bad thing?

At first I resisted the move away from Additive Manufacturing and Rapid Prototyping. But as the term 3D Printing is allowing for a more consistent conversation about the technology through the mainstream press, and as it has been embraced by the public, catching their attention in a way that the other terms didn’t, I’ve decided to get on board and go with it as well.

 

There has been a ‘new generation’ of users exposed to AM/RP/3DP over the past few years, along with a huge media buzz.  How do you see this camp and the ‘old school’ camp coming together?
I think at first there will be lots of differences and levels of knowledge about the capabilities of 3D Printing. But as time goes on, the new generation will learn from the experienced users and in turn, the new generation will bring some fresh approaches that can inspire the ‘old guard’. What will be especially interesting is when students who are now being exposed to 3D Printing in their classrooms graduate and start putting the technology to use in ways that we can’t even dream of right now.

 

What challenges/opportunities do you feel service providers, like Realize, face today?

Service providers are facing lots of challenges in the industry today – with consolidations, pressure to reduce costs, and limited availability of materials probably topping the list. However, as a new generation of 3D printers are revealed, new materials are introduced to the market, and the software, such as the solutions developed here at Materialise, evolves to better answer the growing needs of the markets, we are also in an exciting time where people throughout the industry and constantly pushing the limits of what can be achieved. There are always challenges associated with emerging technologies, but it is the opportunities that make this such a great industry to be involved in.

 

What are some misconceptions about the capabilities of the technologies?

3D Printing is so mind-blowing to so many people that it is perfectly natural that there are misconceptions about what it can achieve – with people both underestimating as well as overestimating what is possible. For people who have only just discovered the technology and who have only seen the desktop printers now entering stores and schools, they think that it will still take years for the machines to reach a point where they can manufacture end-use parts, which has in fact already been possible for years using professional machines. On the other end of the spectrum, a common overestimation is that we are already at the point where 3D printed organs are possible and will soon be implanted in patients, which is still many years away. Instead, we should be celebrating the reality that we are already producing 3D Printed implants and have long been enabling a new level of personalized healthcare with printed medical models, virtual planning and printed surgical guides.

 

What are your thoughts on 3D food and clothing and all the headline grabbing stories about our Industry that are posted daily online?

Well I haven’t tasted any 3D printed food yet and I’m not sure I’m on board with that, but know that many of my colleagues are excited about the possibility. However, when it comes to fashion, I am proud to be working for a company that has been working with the designers who first brought this application of 3D printing to the public’s attention. In collaboration with Iris van Herpen, we have brought 3D Printed fashion to the Paris runways, have worked with designers for New York fashion week as well as bringing our own 3d Printed fashions shows to audiences all over the world – and of course, together with Studio XO, we saw Lady Gaga wearing a 3D printed dress for the first time with her most recent album launch.

 

Are there any new applications for Rapid Prototyping you feel will emerge over the next few years?

As 3D printing continues to grow, I think more and more industries will see the benefit to applying it to their processes. For example, we have already seen the realization of 3D printed insoles, surgical guides, mass customization and the production of hearing aids and as the machines, materials and software continue to improve, even more applications will start to emerge.

 

If you could make a prototype of anything with no care given to time or cost, what would you create?

Well I love to boat so I would love to create a customized 3D printed bimini for my boat or even to print some accessories or replacement parts for it. But I am also fascinated by all the 3D printing in the medical field, which Materialise also plays a large part in. All these advances make me optimistic that if I were ever to need a knee replacement or brain surgery or anything else, 3D printing would play a pivotal role in it.

 

What trends should AM business owners be looking to follow over the next century in your opinion?

I think more people will look to 3D printing for mass customization. There are definitely industries where this makes a lot of sense and also some where it doesn’t. So finding the right niche is key. Also applying 3D printing to more person specific parts or goods – like a customized steering wheel to your hands or headphones that are made for your head like a company in New York is doing.

 

Where do you think 3D Printing will be 50 years from now? (This is just a fun guess, futuristic question)

Wow! That seems so far off. So many things could be possible by then – organs and tissue – more cars and houses. Also I see it being more integrated and utilized with traditional manufacturing.

 

mereedThe Realize Q&A with Steve Griffiths
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Realize Employee Profile: Elliott Dixon

Realize Sales Representative Elliott Dixon

Every Tuesday

Wedding Crashers on repeat

Jay-Z is where it's at for ED

 

Realize is expanding our sales staff and we would like to introduce you to Elliot Dixon.

 

What is your role at Realize?

 

Elliott: Sales Representative for the west coast territory.

What interests you about additive manufacturing and 3D Printing?

 

It’s interesting. With anything we use in our daily lives, it all started with an idea, so to bring peoples ideas to life is a really cool process.

Name some of your favorite things in the world.

 

My Daughter Sophia she is 4.  The Colts, Summer Shandy in the summer and hanging out my with friends.

Favorite meal?

 

I’m a taco Tuesday kind of guy, I make them at home. I prefer corn tortilla hard shells. I always eat tacos on Tuesdays.

 

What music are you listening to right now?

 

I mainly listen to ESPN 1070 The Fan. I love sports radio. My favorite artist is Jay-Z. I have been to every one of his concerts since 2004. I like R&B too. My Favorite Jay-Z song is “Song Cry.”

 

You are permitted to take only two movies with you for a long voyage out in space…which two do you bring?


Wedding Crashers and The Dark Knight

 

What are a couple random items people would be surprised to find out about you?


I don’t have a middle name. It is a family tradition of E.D. initials. I have been 6’1 since 8th grade. I’m still the same height!

 

When you were little you wanted grow up to be?


A lawyer. I liked the movie Liar Liar a lot with Jim Carrey when I was a kid.

 

One word that describes you?

 

Easy.

 

One personal thing you would like to Rapid Prototype?

 

A really cool cell phone case. One nobody had but me.

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Realize Launches New Sales Force

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Realize, Inc. is launching a new proactive sales force that will enhance and grow our business into the future. The plan has been in place since late 2012. The goal was to create and build a strong sales force and we are ready to embark on this exciting new venture. The enhanced sales and client services at Realize also coincides with the release of our state of the art quoting software, RealFastQuotes!, which was put in place to make it easy for our clients to get the fastest and most accurate quotes possible. We talked with Realize president Todd Reese and Sales Manager Alan Conlu about the launch.

 

Todd Reese, President, Realize:

 

In late 2012, it dawned on us that we had been in a reactive mode for a long time, in regard to sales. We made a decision at that time to lay out a road map which would turn our organization into a proactive force. We turned to an outside consultant for help developing this map. As months passed, we began learning better techniques and processes. It took time to implement those techniques and processes, but we began to see good things happen. After a bit of reorganization of our Sales personnel, we felt it necessary to seek out seasoned salespeople to add into the mix. We’ve recently added two new people to serve in this role, and they are moving smoothly through our on-boarding process. At this point, I see the tires smoking, and it’s just a matter of time before they grab the road and we’re off and running in the direction we set out to go.

 

Alan Conlu, Sales Manager, Realize:

 

We have seen the market change over the past few years and we realized what was working in past wasn’t going to take us where we wanted to go. The first part of that change started with launching the Real Fast Quotes system which is a new online quoting service to automate our ordering process. Then we revamped our sales staff by hiring a support person and two new sales representatives. The sales people that we hired went through a stringent screening and hiring process and are currently in our on boarding program which is designed to get them up to speed quickly.

 

How will the new quoting software and new sales staff make doing business with Realize easier?

 

Todd: Regarding our RealFastQuotes Instant Online Quoting System, this enhancement to our services allows clients, both new and current, to obtain quotations instantly for SLA parts. They can login any time of day, on their schedule, to manage quotations and place orders. We encourage everyone to utilize this system. RealFastQuotes combined with our beefed up sales staff, allows us more quality time to build relationships with clients, answer questions and educate, rather than simply taking orders.

 

How does the addition of sales representatives change the dynamics around Realize?

 

Alan: The addition of the sale staff has created a new culture of ideas and of trying new things that will help push the company forward. We wanted to ensure that the people we hired not only fit the position but they also fit the team we wanted to build. Not only is the team experienced but they have diverse backgrounds so each member brings a unique set of skills and energy. There is progress to be made and we are very encouraged by the positive efforts and activities that we already see during our on boarding process.

 

There is a new electricity in the air around the shop, and everyone is excited to see Realize grow.

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