Additive Manufacturing

AUG 2017

ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING is the magazine devoted to industrial applications of 3D printing and digital layering technology. We cover the promise and the challenges of this technology for making functional tooling and end-use production parts.

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AUGUST 2017 Additive Manufacturing 16 TAKING SHAPE Additive manufacturing as a means of making metal parts is a new possibility for many production facilities. Meanwhile, welding is a metalworking operation that is commonplace, well-established and widely employed. Yet aren't these overlapping practices? In the case of metal AM via direct material deposition, they certainly are. Welding consists of adding a layer of molten metal to the work, often for repair of an exist- ing part. Direct-deposition AM also consists of adding a layer of molten metal to the work—and then another layer and another atop that—in order to build up a three-dimensional form or feature. A direct-deposition metal AM system therefore could be used for some welding applications, and if the system is inexpensive enough, then this might even be its primary use and justification. David Ramahi, president and CEO of Optomec, says his company is becoming increasingly aware of the importance of this potential use of its metal-deposition equipment. Last year, the company introduced a standard product consisting of its Laser Engineered Net Shaping (LENS) metal AM technology integrated into a standard vertical machining center. The result is a metal 3D- printing system available for about $250,000, he says, with milling capability also available in this same machine for about 10 percent more. But at that relatively low price, says Ramahi, 3D printing does not necessarily have to be the point of the machine. Where the purpose of welding is repairing or resurfacing parts to put them back into service, the machine could offer a solution for that need. Skilled welders are becoming difficult to find, he notes. As is the case with various industrial trades, welders today are nearing retirement in greater numbers than new people are entering the field. Therefore, while replacing manual welding in some cases with automated welding on a CNC machine tool might be a leap for many facilities, it is a leap that can address an otherwise challenging personnel problem. Indeed, given that these facilities likely already have CNC machining centers, and given that widely used software including Mastercam and Powermill has already been adapted to pro- gram the LENS machine, this choice might represent the leap into automated welding that is easiest for them to make. Along the way, it might also extend the range of repairs welding can peform, because—different from MIG or TIG welding—LENS is a targeted deposition process allowing for repair of thin walls and other delicate features with minimal heat effect. The annual value of welding overall in industrial production is about $20 billion, Ramahi says. Welding for repair represents a share of that, but it is a share he believes is on par with welding for joining. Thus, the annual value of repair-related welding is far greater than the current annual value of industrial 3D printing. But in the scenario he foresees, the use of one might lead to increased use of the other. Welding might be part of the way for AM to find its applications and advance into its ultimate promise. For the facility that has justified a metal AM machine simply for welding, using that same machine to 3D print features onto existing parts, or 3D print complete parts, represents a natural next step that the machine is just waiting for that user to take. Welding as the Starting Point Toward Metal AM By Peter Zelinski A welding machine or a metal 3D printer? The LENS machine tool consists of a vertical machining center adapted to incorporate additive. The machine can be provided either with only additive capa- bility or with the subtractive machining capability also retained.

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