• AMS X: Agenda Published for Additive Manufacturing Strategies 2027

    From February 23-25, 2027, Additive Manufacturing Strategies will be back for its 10th iteration. The important AM industry business conference will once again return to New York City, though hopefully without the blizzard this time around. But, while we may not be able to predict the weather, we can tell you what’s on the agenda for AMS X.

    Co-produced by Additive Manufacturing Research and 3DPrint.com, AMS has grown from a small summit focused solely on additive healthcare into an event centered on business, investment, and manufacturing economics. It started in Washington DC, moved to Boston, and went virtual during the COVID-19 pandemic, before settling in the Big Apple. AMS X will once again be held at the Museum of Jewish Heritage at 36 Battery Place, overlooking Ellis Island and the Statue of Liberty.

    View from the AMS venue.

    So, what’s on the agenda? AMS is well-known for its business focus, with many high-ranking executives and decision-makers from some of the industry’s biggest names in attendance over the years. You can see this thread throughout the 2027 event, with presentations on industry data and forecasts, AM workforce development, globalization, and more. Printing Money Live will be back at the end of Day 1, with panels on Capital Strategies for US Reindustrialization and M&A and Capital Markets. A session on AM Investment Strategies will close out Day 2.

    Once again, the popular CEO Roundtable will be held at the end of the final day of AMS X. But what’s different this time around is that we’re splitting it into two panels! The first will feature VulcanForms CEO Kevin Kassekert; Sam O’Leary, CEO of Nikon SLM Solutions AG; and Joe Calmese, President and CEO of ADDMAN. The second will welcome Yoav Zeif, CEO of Stratasys; Marie Langer, CEO of EOS; and Materialise CEO Brigitte de Vet-Veithen.

    Stratasys CEO Yoav Zeif at AMS 2026.

    At AMS X, Zeif will once again give the main conference keynote, just as in several years past. Langer and Glynn Fletcher, Chief Customer Advocate (CCA) for the EOS Group and President of EOS North America, will present a keynote to open Day 2; later in the day, HP‘s SVP & GM of Additive Manufacturing Solutions Alex Monino will present a keynote. Arno Held, AM Ventures Managing Partner, will give a keynote to open the AM Investment Strategies session.

    Speaking of AM Ventures, the German investment company is in charge of the opening networking reception, like it has been for the past few years. But just like with the CEO Roundtable, this reception is also being split into two, with one part at the end of Day 1 and a second part at the end of Day II. There will also be an evening mixer (location TBA) after the second part of the AM Ventures networking reception is over, and a farewell happy hour once the conference ends midday on Day 3.

    3DPrint.com Executive Editor & AMS Chairperson Joris Peels at AMS 2026.

    Other AMS X highlights include:

    • Panel on Resilient Manufacturing: MRO and Infrastructure
    • Panel on Lower Cost Metal AM
    • Special Presentation on Bioprinting
    • Panel on Mass Manufacturing
    • Panel on Additive Construction
    • Session on Aerospace & Defense
    • Panel on International Collaboration Towards AM Adoption

    Everything on the agenda is still subject to change, as there are still several months to go until the big event. But we think it’s going to be great!

    If you’re interested in becoming a sponsor or exhibitor at AMS X, let us know here. You can register for the event here.

    Images courtesy of 3DPrint.com

  • Beehive Industries Buys Two Nikon NXGs

    For a long time, Beehive Industries was very mysterious. The secretive firm was burning a lot of cash working on something super secret with a tribe of very experienced Additive people. Led by Mohammad Ehteshami, who spent over 32 years at GE working on the GE90 and other engine programs, the company only fairly recently revealed what it is doing. The company got at least a $29 million SOSSEC consortium contract to make lots of 200- and 125-lpf pound engines, the Frenzy 8 and Frenzy 6.

    Beehive is developing a family of engines to power drones, missiles, and other craft. Made with 3D printing, these compact, relatively affordable engines can become a key element in the surge underway as the US scales up 3D printing to produce drones and missiles. War in Iran has shown just how quickly the US can deplete its precision arsenal. And now the US wants to make much more of the things that matter. Hundreds of thousands of craft rather than 2500 of the best airplanes in the world.

    And Beehive is filling this gap. Only a few weeks ago, the film announced the biggest public EOS order, for $50 million. This order was already huge, giving the company 30 M4 ONYX 3D printers. That order alone in one fell swoop makes them one of the largest capacity companies in North America. The company said that the order “more than doubles Beehive’s metal additive manufacturing capacity.” That would mean it has around 10 to 20 machines now, and with the order it will have over 50. But now the firm wants to do one better and order two NXG 600E as well. In addition to EOS’s evolution of the 400, it now wants one of the largest production systems also. This is significant. I, for one, will do my darnedest to obtain a Beehive Industries T-shirt or hat of some sort to get unlimited free snacks at trade shows. Beehive has said that it wants to make 8000 engines a year at one point. And of course, if we look at the public order, we can see that, in reality, the order is probably much larger than just the initial $29 million. Publicly, the company has raised over $3 million in funding, so there must be more money coming in somewhere.

    Beehive Industries’ Frenzy engine. Image courtesy of Beehive Industries.

    Additionally, the company has bought two local machine shops, Planet Products and Able Tool, to help them finish parts and perform CNC work. This, coupled with the Nikon order, means the Ohio-based company is scaling across the board. And being in Ohio is a great asset. There will be real political help there for the firm in Washington if it brings in orders and creates more jobs for the state. Manufacturing is important to Ohio, and the state has been a locus of lots of America Makes attention and love. Including rent, the cost of living in Ohio could be as much as 28% lower than in Los Angeles, and rent could be half as much. This could be an advantage in paying people more or having them live better for the same money. Sure, LA is cooler, but how many taco truck tacos equal an extra bedroom?

    Beehive states that the NXG purchase is set to fund and calls it a “significant investment in NXG 600E systems.” The 600x600x1500mm systems are to be used for Ti6Al4V and Constellium’s Aheadd CP1. This is yet another very public win for CP1, the powder of champions. It’s insane how quickly everyone is becoming a total fan of this material. And how great, of course, that America Makes and Nikon were working on the materials dataset for this a year ago. This should get even more people to look at CP1 and how it is being used at scale.

    The two printers will be used for “whole vehicle bodies, large substructures for satellites, and other large, 3D-printed components for space and A&D customers.” Does that mean that they want to make a hypersonic cruiser body out of CP1? Or are we talking spars and bodies made of Ti?

    Darius Ehteshami, Chief Operations and Finance Officer at Beehive Industries, said,

    “There is a heavy overlap between the customers who rely on Beehive’s propulsion solutions and those who require advanced aerospace printed solutions. By investing proactively in these machines, Beehive is uniquely positioned to provide aerostructures and parts that enable our customers to fly higher and fly faster. This is Beehive doubling down on our history of large format additive manufacturing, supporting our customers in both the A&D area and in space.”

    Hamid Zarringhalam, CEO and General Manager of Nikon Advanced Manufacturing, said,

    “Manufacturers supporting today’s defense programs require production technology that can scale quickly and reliably. Beehive Industries has built an impressive business around advanced propulsion and aerospace manufacturing, and we’re proud to support their continued growth with the NXG 600E platform.” He further commented, “Our companies are deeply committed to enabling and scaling the defense industrial base, and this represents a key step in delivering the advanced manufacturing capabilities that are crucial to the United States and our allied partners.”

    Jonaaron Jones, President of Additive Parts Sales at Beehive Industries, stated,

    “This investment marks the natural evolution of our company, seamlessly carrying our legacy of large-format expertise forward into the next generation of manufacturing for our external parts customers across the space, defense, and aerostructures sectors,”

    It seems that Beehive is becoming more Sintavia-like once again and opening up more to orders from the industry as a whole. This, in addition to its engine programs, could help it scale more. I really like how Beehive seems to be scaling sensibly. Rocket engines are hard enough, and the firm is relying on multiple vendors to underpin its growth. By focusing on process control, design, and production, the company can scale in line with expectations and capabilities to capture a burgeoning defense market hungry for additive goods.

  • After 17 Years at 3D Systems, Katie Weimer Is Betting on Regenerative Breast Tissue

    After spending 17 years helping build healthcare applications at 3D Systems and its predecessor Medical Modeling, Katie Weimer wasn’t planning to launch a startup. But when a regenerative breast tissue project she had worked on for years was in danger of being shelved, she decided to take a chance.

    “It was just kind of going to go away, and I said, ‘I’ll take it,’” Weimer told 3DPrint.com. “I had been working on this regenerative breast tissue project since probably 2021. I believed in the mission and didn’t want to see it disappear. It needed focused money and attention, and I needed to move fast. Those things are really hard in a big company.”

    That decision eventually became Genesis Tissue, a Colorado-based startup developing a 3D printed scaffold designed to help patients regenerate their own breast tissue after cancer surgery.

    The mission is also personal. Weimer lost her mother to breast cancer, an experience that helped shape her interest in breast reconstruction and regenerative medicine. When the project faced an uncertain future, walking away wasn’t something she was willing to do.

    Of course, the company is still several years away from commercialization, but its technology represents a different approach to reconstruction, one that wants to replace permanent implants with tissue generated by the patient’s own body.

    Looking Beyond Silicone

    For decades, silicone implants have been one of the primary options for breast reconstruction following cancer treatment. While they have helped countless patients, Weimer believes there is room for something better.

    For decades, silicone implants have been the standard option for many breast reconstruction procedures and account for the majority of breast implants placed each year. In fact, they account for roughly 80-90% of breast implants used today. Genesis Tissue is not trying to replace them overnight. But Weimer believes there is room for something better, and that patients could benefit from a regenerative solution.

    “There are hundreds of thousands of these implanted every year, and for breast reconstruction specifically, about one-third develop complications,” she said. “Tens of thousands are removed every year. They have a limited lifespan, they carry an FDA box warning, and they come with a warranty because they’re not meant to last forever. They’ve helped a lot of people, but we believe we can do better.”

    Genesis Tissue’s 3D printed regenerative breast tissue scaffolds are designed in different sizes and shapes to match each patient’s anatomy and support tissue regeneration. Image courtesy of Genesis Tissue.

    Genesis Tissue’s solution begins after a tumor is removed. A patient-specific scaffold is implanted into the breast and then filled with the patient’s own fat tissue, typically harvested through a small liposuction procedure. The fat contains cells and biological components that help support tissue growth. Over time, the scaffold slowly degrades while new tissue forms in its place.

    “We use the body as the bioreactor,” Weimer explained. “We harvest the patient’s fat, which is incredibly rich in stem cells and other regenerative components, and inject it into the scaffold. As the scaffold gradually degrades, the tissue grows and stabilizes. The goal is that you’re ultimately left with the patient’s own healthy tissue instead of a permanent foreign implant.”

    At the center of the technology is a soft material that provides structure as new tissue forms and then gradually breaks down as the body heals.

    A Different Kind of Bioprinting Story

    Weimer’s path into bioprinting began long before Genesis Tissue. A mechanical engineer by training, she spent much of her career helping advance 3D printed medical applications. Along the way, she became interested in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. That curiosity eventually led her to pursue a PhD in bioengineering at Colorado State University while still working in industry.

    “I started working with all of these incredibly smart researchers, and they would start talking about cells and biology, and I realized how much I didn’t know. I thought I was going to take a class or two. But it turned into a PhD.”

    Today, Genesis Tissue operates out of an incubator at Colorado State University’s Spur campus in Denver, giving the startup access to academic resources and collaborators as it continues development. The transition from corporate executive to startup founder, however, was not always easy.

    “There was a point where I was sitting at home trying to negotiate the technology transfer and build the company, and I had no dollars, no job, and no insurance,” Weimer recalled. “Every founder has some version of that story. It’s scary. But now we have this incredible team, and everyone is completely committed to the mission.”

    Moving Toward the Clinic

    Genesis Tissue is currently in the preclinical phase of development and conducting large-animal studies. Like most implantable medical technologies, the product must still move through years of testing and regulatory review before reaching patients.

    “It’s a long development pathway. You go through research and development, preclinical studies, clinical studies, and, hopefully, FDA approval. It’s difficult, expensive, and time-consuming. That’s one of the reasons people don’t pursue projects like this.”

    Genesis Tissue’s regenerative breast tissue scaffold undergoes compression testing to evaluate its mechanical strength while maintaining the flexibility needed for soft tissue applications. Image courtesy of Genesis Tissue.

    What’s more, Weimer told me funding remains one of the company’s biggest challenges: “The technical challenge is creating the next generation of biodegradable, implantable soft materials. The business challenge is raising enough money to get through preclinical and clinical development. That’s true for almost every company working in this space.”

    Still, Weimer believes regenerative medicine is approaching a turning point. For years, bioprinting has often been linked to printing entire organs for implantation. Of course, those efforts are still ongoing, but she argues that many practical applications are much closer than most people realize.

    “What people sometimes miss is that bioprinting is already happening,” she noted. “There is an enormous amount of research, a tremendous amount of investment, and real applications moving toward the clinic. We finally have the tools to create materials that behave more like the human body. That’s what makes this moment different.”

    For Genesis Tissue, the immediate goal is breast reconstruction. But Weimer sees broader possibilities ahead, like pressure ulcers, traumatic injuries, cosmetic procedures, and other soft-tissue applications that could eventually benefit from the same platform technology.

    At this stage, the company is fully focused on its first mission, which is helping women recover from breast cancer with a solution designed to regenerate what was lost rather than simply replace it.

    “We’re not doing this to publish a paper; we’re trying to build something that helps people. That’s what keeps us focused every day,” concluded Weimer.

  • 3DPOD 306: Super Polymers for 3D Printing with Mike Zimmerman, Z-Polymers

    Mike Zimmerman started in research before starting his own startups. Now his firm makes a fiber with some very exciting properties indeed. The material has been turned into a very high-strength filament. We talk to Mike about the beginnings of his research, how he approaches invention, how he views entrepreneurship, and the prospects of his firm. One interesting element is that, although the material is very costly, Mike is targeting desktop material-extrusion systems for growth, a sign of a changing landscape.

    This episode of the 3DPOD is brought to you by HeyGears, an innovation-driven 3D printing solution company devoted to taking digital manufacturing to the next level for individuals and businesses around the world. HeyGears’ extensive expertise and self-developed resin, 3D printing hardware, software, materials, and service platforms mean they can offer complete, easy-to-use, and reliable 3D printing workflows for all types of users, from beginners to advanced professionals looking to get things made. Learn more about them at HeyGears.com.

     

  • Why Elegoo Chose Emoji® to Introduce More People to 3D Printing

    When Elegoo unveiled the world’s first officially licensed emoji®-themed 3D printer, it wasn’t just launching another version of an existing machine. The company was testing a much bigger idea by exploring whether a global brand like emoji® could make 3D printing feel more familiar to people who have never used it before.

    “We think 3D printing has entered a stage where it’s really accessible to everyone,” Elegoo’s Ryan Wang, Senior PR Manager, told 3DPrint.com. “The barriers are much lower now, but many people still aren’t aware of the magic of the technology.”

    He believes one reason is that most 3D printers still look and feel like technical equipment designed for enthusiasts: “The industry has been designing products with a very techy outlook. They can feel cold and not very personalized. We wanted to create something that feels culturally relevant and approachable, so people feel familiar with the printer instead of intimidated by it.”

    “For Elegoo, the emoji® brand was a natural fit because nearly everyone already understands the language of emojis. They’re universally recognized icons that are part of everyday life,” Ryan said. “Sending an emoji® is easy and intuitive. We think 3D printing has become just as intuitive, so there was a shared foundation for this collaboration.”

    Looking beyond makers

    The collaboration is also part of a broader effort to reach people who have never considered buying a 3D printer. According to Wang, the launch attracted media outside the traditional maker and technology press, including lifestyle and parenting outlets.

    To introduce the printer, Elegoo held a launch event in New York for media outside the traditional maker and technology press. According to Wang, many attendees had never used or even seen a 3D printer before.

    “They got their hands on the printer and were really amazed,” Ryan said. “We want to reach people who have known about 3D printing for years but still aren’t sure if it’s for them. We’re here to tell them that they can do it. It’s just time to try it.”

    While younger users are an important audience, Ryan said the goal isn’t limited to one generation. Elegoo already works with schools and regularly sees students adopting the technology quickly. He said young people are often the first to experiment with new tools, and the company has seen many stories of teenagers using 3D printing to create projects and even start small businesses.

    More than making parts

    “3D printing is becoming another way people express themselves. What you print can really represent what kind of person you are,” he noted. “If you like fixing things around your house, you’ll print functional parts. If you’re a comic fan, you’ll print figurines. If you’re into cars, you’ll print accessories to personalize your vehicle. Instead of viewing printers simply as machines, we see them becoming personal products that reflect their owners.”

    That idea also extends beyond the hardware itself.

    “I think the whole ecosystem is becoming more important than the hardware. We’re building platforms where creators can share their models and inspire other people to print. The community is becoming very important for the industry.”

    ELEGOO × emoji® Centauri Carbon 2 Combo. Image courtesy of ELEGOO.

    Could more licensed printers follow? For now, Elegoo says it’s watching how customers respond before announcing additional partnerships.

    “If people really embrace this product and it makes them want to buy a 3D printer, then we’ll think about the next IP,” Ryan said. “Maybe something from movies or games. That would be very cool.”

    Although no future collaborations have been announced, he said the company believes it has opened a new direction for consumer 3D printing.

    “We’re the first brand to collaborate with a globally known IP like this. This one is really something that tries to break down barriers to become a mainstream lifestyle product,” Ryan said. “We want to make printers more personalized instead of having them all look the same. I imagine a future where people customize their printers much like they customize smartphones, with different appearances, interfaces, and accessories.

    ELEGOO × emoji® Centauri Carbon 2 Combo and 3D printed emojis. Image courtesy of ELEGOO.

    A project years in the making

    The emoji® printer may look like a lot of fun, but bringing it to market took time. Wang said the idea was first discussed more than two years before the product launched. Because the printer is based on Elegoo’s existing Centauri Carbon 2 Combo, a high-speed CoreXY machine capable of printing up to 500 mm/s, the company could focus on redesigning the experience instead of developing an entirely new machine from scratch. The special edition Elegoo x emoji® brand Centauri Carbon 2 Combo has an emoji-inspired exterior, a customized user interface, and access to officially licensed emoji® 3D models. It also includes an emoji-themed UI interface experience designed to make the printer feel more approachable for first-time users.

    For Elegoo, though, the printer represents something much bigger than a “cosmetic redesign,” explains Wang.

    “People need to feel comfortable with the technology before they’ll try it. The project may have started with emoji®, but it points toward a different future for consumer 3D printing.”

    If licensed brands like emoji® can do that, the first emoji® printer could end up being remembered as much more than a novelty. It could be the beginning of a new way to introduce 3D printing to the mainstream.

  • 3D Printing News Briefs, July 11, 2026: Fundraiser, Strategic Guide, Dentures, & More

    In this weekend’s 3D Printing News Briefs, we’re starting with relief efforts for the earthquakes that hit Venezuela last month. Then we’ll move on to a new white paper from PostProcess Technologies, and a new strategic guide from ASTM International’s Additive Manufacturing Center of Excellence (AM CoE). The LEGO Group opened its first dedicated manufacturing innovation center, which includes an AM center. We’ll end with a heartwarming story about Remote Area Medical, which provides 3D printed dentures to low-income patients.

    Maker Community & Bambu Lab Supporting Venezuela Earthquake Relief

    Photos courtesy of LayerLab and Ostec3D. © Carlos Javier Hernández Carrillo (LayerLab) and Nober Alejandro Peña Santos (Ostec3D).

    On June 24th, 2026, Venezuela was hit with what the U.S. Geological Survey called “the strongest seismic event” the country’s seen in over a century: twin earthquakes, magnitudes 7.2 and 7.5. More than 3,500 people have died, over 16,000 have been injured, and over 17,000 residents are now homeless. But, just like during the COVID-19 pandemic, the maker community is stepping up to offer their support, 3D printing medical aids, open-sourcing helpful designs, and coordinating cross-border deliveries. Venezuelan entrepreneurship initiative Ostec3D, which is focused on 3D printed orthoses, released a full set of thermoplastic splint files through a public Google Drive archive. Then, connecting through communities like Reddit, other people started printing things like splints, cervical collars, and oxygen cone connectors. Bambu Lab LATAM committed to $50,000 in cash support, and official Venezuelan Bambu distributor LayerLab donated 3D printers and 160 kilograms of filament to teams and workshops helping with the relief efforts.

    As Bambu said, “If you do print, print with intention: only the items that the people coordinating relief have actually asked for and approved.” But, if you’re looking for other ways to help, Bambu is offering you a chance through its new community initiative. Starting this Monday, July 13th, at 8 am Venezuela time (UTC−4), the company is launching a 48-hour fundraising campaign. Available exclusively on the Bambu Lab US and EU online stores, customers can buy PLA Basic Refill filament in the three colors of the Venezuelan flag: yellow (10400), blue (10601), and red (10200). Enter the promo code 4Venezuela at checkout, and Bambu will donate an amount equal to each product’s MSRP, and not the discount price. Once the campaign closes on July 15th, the company will publish the total amount raised, 100% of which will be donated to UN Crisis Relief. Stay tuned to Bambu Lab’s official channels for the full campaign details, including eligibility and how donations are handled for cancellations or returned. Way to go, makers!

    PostProcess Releases White Paper on AM Environment, Health, & Safety Concerns

    Image courtesy of PostProcess Technologies

    At RAPID+TCT in Boston earlier this year, I spoke with Jeff Mize, CEO of PostProcess Technologies, about several topics. One of the most important was safety, which he told me was “driving probably 50% of our conversations today.” At the time, the company was working on a new white paper examining the environmental, health, and safety (EH&S) considerations in AM post-processing. Now, PostProcess has officially published the white paper, titled “Environment, Health & Safety Concerns in the Post-Processing of Additively Manufactured Parts.” As more additive companies move towards production, EH&S considerations are becoming ever more important, especially as traditional post-processing methods can come with risks that negatively affect facilities, operators, workflow efficiency, and regulatory compliance. The white paper focuses on the safety risks associated with those conventional methods, like flammable solvents and open chemical tanks, as well as emerging industry trends (limiting use of IPA in AM facilities) and best practices.

    “This white paper explores the EH&S challenges facing today’s additive manufacturers and examines how enclosed, automated systems and safer detergents from PostProcess Technologies can help reduce workplace risk, improve sustainability, and support more consistent post-processing operations.”

    You can download the new PostProcess Technologies white paper for free here.

    ASTM International AM CoE Publishes Guide for Certifying 3D Printed Defense Parts

    The ASTM International Additive Manufacturing Center of Excellence (AM CoE) recently published the “Strategic Guide to Certification of Additively Manufactured Parts in Defence Applications,” available to download for free. It offers support to defense organizations, suppliers, and manufacturers on qualifying and certifying 3D printed parts, giving them a criticality-based approach to parts qualification and certification over land, air, and sea. The guide, while also helping defense supply chains and allied partners around the globe, was actually developed to support the UK’s Ministry of Defence (MOD) and its Project TAMPA, an AM accelerator that determined one of the central barriers to scaling AM for defense applications was actually inconsistent part certification. Rather than a regulation or standard, the guide is a “signposting resource,” written to be both nation- and technology-agnostic. It lays out a four-tier part classification, two certification courses of action, evidence expectations across main certification activities, and more.

    “Additive manufacturing earns a place in defense only when a part can be trusted in service, and that trust depends on qualification and certification that hold up consistently across organizations, domains, and borders. This guide gives manufacturers and authorities across the global defense community a shared, criticality-based reference point,” said Mohsen Seifi, Ph.D., ASTM International’s vice president of global advanced manufacturing.

    The LEGO Group Opens Dedicated Manufacturing Innovation Campus

    Founded in Billund, Denmark in 1932, the LEGO Group is one of the biggest names out there using 3D printing for consumer goods. Recently, it opened its first dedicated global manufacturing innovation center, the Kornmarken Campus. Just like its headquarters, the campus, partially powered by a nearby solar park, is located in Billund, and it’s part of the company’s investment in manufacturing technologies, as well as capabilities that drive product development and production. The 47,000 m² campus forms a 100,000 m² state-of-the-art facility, where about 1,800 LEGO employees from manufacturing, engineering, and quality will work to develop, test, and scale manufacturing technologies, and continue producing the iconic LEGO bricks. Features include a 25-tonne 2×4 LEGO brick installation, rainwater management, and energy-efficient systems. The key facilities at Kornmarken Campus include a materials lab, mold manufacturing space, training academy, test and innovation center, and, of course, an additive manufacturing center.

    “The LEGO Group has among the most talented engineers and craftspeople in the world,” said Carsten Rasmussen, Chief Operations Officer for the LEGO Group. “This facility will provide them with the necessary tools and technologies to expand what’s possible for product development and production, both now and in the future.”

    RAM Uses 3D Printed Dentures to Give Smiles to Low-Income Patients 

    Image: Remote Area Medical via Facebook

    About 72 million adults in the U.S. do not have dental insurance. These are the people that nonprofit organization Remote Area Medical (RAM) helps with its volunteer-powered, mobile care units. In 2023, Connor Gibson was an engineering student at Walter State Community College in Morristown, Tennessee, near RAM’s headquarters. Inspired by its mission to help the poor, he began volunteering with RAM, which also offers free vision and medical care to low-income people. The 22-year-old is now the nonprofit’s dental technology manager, using his engineering skills to 3D print dentures for the most vulnerable people in the country. Initially, he had no dental or 3D printing skills, but taught himself everything he needed to know, and eventually came up with RAM’s Mobile Digital Denture Lab, which enables the nonprofit to fit patients with free 3D printed dentures the same weekend they come in. Gibson used grants to secure the first 3D printers for RAM, and recently set a personal record of 35 dentures printed in a weekend. Since he began, he’s fitted thousands of people with dentures, both traditionally and additively manufactured, and he says their reactions to their new smiles humble him.

    “Something that I was able to have a hand in makes a grown man burst into tears. To see that raw, human emotion and just know that I played a change in this person’s life…it’s very humbling, and I’m beyond blessed,” Gibson told CNN.

    “You have people that are really down on their luck. The reality is we’re all one slip or one fall away from needing two teeth in the front…just to be able to smile again.”

  • Kentstrapper Releases the 1 Cubic Meter Material Extrusion Mille System for €40,000

    Kentstrapper makes Material Extrusion systems in Italy. Now the firm has released the 1,000 × 1,000 × 1,000 mm build volume Mille system. The one-cubic-meter build volume is actively heated by six independent pads across the build floor. You can slide out the print bed to remove parts. The build chamber temperature can reach 60°C while the bed can be heated to 120°C. The Magnetic Extrusion System means that you can swap toolheads quickly without any tools at all. Layer height is 0.1 to 1.2 mm, and nozzle sizes are from 0.4 to 1.4 mm. The printer has two Mantis extruders, and if one is blocked, the other can take over. The printer has been tested with PLA, PETG, ASA, ASA-CF, ABS, TPU, PA GF, PA CF, and PPS CF materials. The company sure has come a long way since we covered their plywood Galileo system in 2014.

    The printer has a remote monitoring tool and protected remote access. Rather uniquely, the printer has a Telegram bot which sends you notifications and updates. There’s also an AI assistant called Clara. This bot has been trained on maintenance and support tickets handled by the firm. You can query it to solve issues, or it can notify you if it spots something unusual. The firmware is Klipper, slicing is via OrcaSlicer, and the firm is targeting tooling, automotive, defense, and marine with the Mille printer.

    The price for the made-in-Italy machine is a very reasonable-sounding €40,000 (ex-VAT). In business for over 10 years, the company has sold over 2,500 systems. Kentstrapper is known as a good-value machine builder. The Florence-based firm makes five distinct Material Extrusion systems. One is meant for tall objects, and there’s also a 700×500×500 mm system; everything seems well made. What’s more, the features that these systems have are all very useful ones. It’s just the kind of no-nonsense stuff that you’d like to have if you just want to print.

    Good monitoring and easy model extraction are important for very large parts. The automatic nozzle changeover feature seems like a great idea. Multi-day or overnight prints could really benefit if the printer could resolve a clog while you sleep. At the same time, a lot of desktop systems are great until you have to do maintenance. Nozzle exchanges or toolhead changes on a Bambu, for example, are often needlessly complicated and time-intensive. By making it a tool-less, super-quick process, this printer respects the operator’s time. If you have a farm with 500 P2Ss, you can just switch to another one and repair it later at your leisure. But, with bigger systems you won’t have so many. And even if you had a few of them, typically you’d have them loaded up with different materials. I’m always going to be skeptical of AI tools, but the things they’re trying to do here seem useful.

    One major use case for this printer and much larger units, such as the Caracol robotic arm polymer printers, is marine. Marine furniture is often low-volume, with clients doing a lot of custom design or being able to choose from different layouts. Things like cabinets, tables, recesses, storage units, and more can be printed and upholstered, doing duty in the boats. All sorts of housing products for electronics, storage, and more can be printed too. In automotive, rail, and defense, large tooling is often very expensive when using CNC and other processes. Companies have used 3D printers sold for hundreds of thousands of dollars to make these, often gluing parts together. For a lot of these applications, you can now make the entire tool on this affordable printer in one go. Some of these tools will typically cost more than the printer. For the hand lay-up and carbon fiber industry, large tools are also often used, and this machine may be useful there too.

    I really hope that you can physically unplug all of that AI and networking stuff because that will help the adoption of this system in aerospace and defense. In medium-format, we’re seeing real competition in pricing. Slow, inaccurate systems are still being sold on the low end, and big, expensive tools are also being sold. For a lot of things, the really expensive stuff is what you need. But, there is a new segment emerging. This segment avoids the long post-processing and machining that you would need to do on parts made by much larger printers. For some tools, these systems can make them straight out of the machine. And the new systems tend to be faster than cheap laggards on the low end. This is leading to a lot of competition around the 1 cubic meter build volume level.

    We’re now, as a market, delivering a lot of value there. For large tools, ROI can be realized in a number of months. The machine can simply chug along, delivering on value and parts while you do something else. With higher speeds, lower machine costs, and smoother parts, these tooling printers are starting to permeate more industrial and manufacturing sites. They’re an excellent choice, and we should see growth from this segment and companies such as Kentstrapper.

  • The Next Phase of EB-PBF Will Be Defined by Beam Control

    The bar for metal additive manufacturing has moved. Early on, the question was often simple: Can the machine print the material and produce a dense part? That still matters, but it is no longer enough.

    You can see this across metal AM. Laser powder bed fusion continues to advance quickly. More lasers, higher power, beam shaping, larger machines, better monitoring, and increased automation are pushing L-PBF further into production. Recent major events like Formnext, TCT Asia, AMUG, and RAPID + TCT have shown how quickly the laser side is scaling.

    The most visible example is China. Eplus3D announced the EP-M3050 metal AM system with a build volume over three meters in X and Y and up to 256 lasers. This is an extreme example, but it shows where L-PBF is heading: scale, parallelization, automation, and cost reduction.

    This progress deserves respect. L-PBF has the largest installed base, the broadest ecosystem, and the strongest production momentum in metal AM. It also shapes how many people view metal AM. Productivity discussions often focus on laser count, build rate, surface finish, machine utilization, and established material portfolios. That is understandable. The leading process becomes the way people think about the field as a whole.

    The risk is that other processes are judged by laser-based assumptions.

    EB-PBF often falls into this trap. It is often framed in terms of old references: electron beam versus laser, vacuum versus inert gas, hot build versus cold build, rougher surfaces versus smoother surfaces. These comparisons are familiar, but they also miss a more interesting question: what happens when the electron beam becomes a more precise manufacturing tool?

    From melting to control

    EB-PBF is not simply a laser process with a different heat source. It combines vacuum, elevated powder bed temperature, electromagnetic beam deflection, rapid beam movement, charge management, thermal history, and electron-material interaction. Together, these conditions create a different physical regime from L-PBF.

    The difference matters most when the application is driven by material behavior, qualification confidence, or thermal control.

    Beam control means more than moving the beam from one coordinate to another. It includes where energy is applied, how quickly it is applied, how the beam is focused, how heat accumulates, how exposure is sequenced, how preheating and melting interact, and how often the machine repeats the same strategy.

    For metallurgists, these are not secondary settings. Beam dwell time, scan speed, focus, sequence, and local energy density affect melt pool shape, temperature gradients, cooling rate, and reheating. Those factors influence grain growth, residual stress, cracking sensitivity, and final properties.

    For EB-PBF, this is the more interesting discussion.

    The old view of EB-PBF focused on process attributes: vacuum, heat, surface finish, and materials. The stronger view is about process control. In mature EB-PBF, the beam becomes a tool for thermal strategy.

    Point melting is a signal

    One clear signal is the growing interest among several EB-PBF suppliers in various forms of point-based exposure strategies. Electromagnetic beam deflection enables very high scan and jump speeds, which makes these strategies possible.

    Colibrium Additive reports that EBM Point Melt melts powder through small spots rather than conventional lines. The company connects the method to more accurate temperature control, reduced temperature gradients, reduced sintering needs, improved surface quality, and simpler support structures.

    Similar ideas appear in work by Freemelt, ProBeam, and others. More importantly, EB-PBF is moving from conventional scan paths toward programmable beam logic.

    A hatch strategy treats the beam path mainly as a route across a layer. Point-based exposure makes the timing, position, and sequence of energy input more central. Heat can be distributed differently. Local thermal gradients can be managed differently. The exposure strategy becomes part of the metallurgy.

    Research has pointed in this direction for years. Some early ideas emerged before scan speeds and machine capabilities made practical implementation realistic. Work on Alloy 718 has shown that EB-PBF melting strategies can tailor grain morphology, including transitions between columnar, equiaxed, and bimodal structures, by changing processing conditions and local solidification behavior.

    Many of the most valuable AM applications are limited by material formation rather than geometry alone. Residual stress, cracking, evaporation, local overheating, swelling, distortion, and microstructure variation are process problems before they become inspection problems. They are created during the build, and EB-PBF offers ways to influence them that are difficult to reproduce in laser-based systems.

    Better beam control gives engineers a way to address those problems.

    Observation changes the argument

    Control matters more when it can be shown and understood.

    This is one of the most interesting areas in EB-PBF. The electron beam is the energy source, but electron-material interaction can also create useful process signals.

    JEOL describes a back-scattered electron (BSE) image monitoring function on the JAM-5200EBM. The system captures backscattered electrons emitted from the electron beam and uses them to observe surface morphology and defects layer by layer. JEOL links this directly to its background as an electron microscope manufacturer.

    Internals of the JAM-5200EBM. Image courtesy of JEOL.

    The point is broader than a single machine feature. Industrial AM needs strong process evidence.

    A process image has limited value as a picture. Its value increases when it helps connect what happened during the build to the final part’s condition. That connection is central for process development, root cause analysis, material qualification, and production confidence.

    Academic work is also moving in this direction. Research at Linköping University on in-melt electron analysis has explored the use of emitted electron signals to monitor melt pool characteristics and surface depression during EB-PBF. The authors present the approach as a promising tool for process control in PBF-EB.

    Parameter sets are useful, but they are weak evidence on their own. Density measurements come late. A post-build inspection shows the result after the process has finished. Layer-wise process information gives engineers another view into cause and effect. Real-time process monitoring through back-scattered electron imaging provides continuous observation and a stronger basis for process control across every layer of the build. For difficult materials and expensive parts, this could become a major advantage.

    Layer-wise process information gives engineers another view into cause and effect. Real-time process monitoring through back-scattered electron imaging provides continuous observation and a stronger basis for process control across every layer of the build. For difficult materials and expensive parts, this could become a major advantage.

    About the Author:

    Ulf Lindhe. Image courtesy of The Org.

    Ulf Lindhe is a veteran executive in the additive manufacturing industry with decades of experience spanning technology development, industrial strategy, and global market expansion. He has held senior leadership roles within the metal additive manufacturing sector, contributing to the commercialization and international growth of advanced AM systems. Over the course of his career, Lindhe has worked closely with aerospace, medical, and high-performance engineering companies, helping bridge the gap between technological capability and practical industrial deployment.

    This is Part 1 of a two-part series by Ulf Lindhe on the future of electron beam powder bed fusion (EB-PBF). In Part 2, Lindhe explores how these advances could reshape industrial adoption, qualification, and the broader competitive position of EB-PBF within metal additive manufacturing.

  • The SLS Market, Game of Trucks: Part 2

    With the release of the new HP 1200 and the Formlabs X1, we can see real competition from very different segments. From several million dollars to just $20,000, the laser powder bed fusion market is going to be a much more competitive place over the next twelve months. In the first part of this article, we looked at the largest systems; now we focus on the mid-market, where most systems are sold. The idea behind this series is to, through the lens of trucks and commercial vehicles find an analogous differentiation in products that is currently slowly underway in the SLS market.

    Light Trucks/ Commercial Vehicles: Mid Market

    Comparison of several established industrial polymer powder bed fusion systems. Image courtesy of 3DPrint.com/Joris Peels.

    In the light truck and light commercial vehicle segment, there are many different setups, but the predominant one is the van-like setup, with four exemplars: the Ford Transit, the Mercedes Sprinter, the Dodge Ram ProMaster, and the LDV. LDV is a budget brand, and its quality will probably improve over time. Traditionally, however, LDV vans have been cheap but have come with quality and longevity issues, frequently breaking down. For now, the LDV is not a good choice. The Dodge Ram is no frills, simple, but easy and cheap to convert into the van of your dreams. It’s simple to repair and maintain. The Transit is techier and more comfortable, with easy-to-love features that make it a good choice. Pricier and more expensive to service, the Sprinter feels better and is more comfortable,

    LDV: Low Investment

    We’re seeing this in metal a lot, with crappy metal printers all over the place. Happily, the polymer segment has, for the most part, escaped the slyest, most lying of vendors who make shaky machines that will last only as relics of bad choices. I call this segment the prison tattoo segment.

    ProMaster: Low Part Cost/Low Investment/High Customization

    Skala Conversions Turns Ram ProMaster into the Ultimate Camper Van. Image courtesy of Skala Conversions.

    I expect another system to emerge as well. This is a commoditized, inexpensive, large system. It may have a big 1000 × 500 × 450 mm build volume, but the optics will be so last year, and lasers will be cheaper. It will have none of the finesse of the other systems, will not be continuously productive, nor will it have the level of detail and repeatability. But it will be just good enough. It will be low-cost to maintain and easy to customize. By reducing capex and being productive enough, this kind of machine will enable low part cost. Rather than buy a finished machine, maybe you buy most of it and then add expensive lasers, change the optics somehow, make your own controls, optimize it for one material, etc. People will buy a good enough system and then invest in the parts that matter to them, similar to what Jason at Next Chapter Manufacturing is doing. They’ll develop specific manufacturing solutions for themselves, as he has done.

    Transit: Low part cost, commoditized The Allrounder

    Ford’s e-Transit Custom van. Image courtesy of Ford.

    Here is the largest segment in this part of the market, the one that will be the largest overall in value. Relatively easy to use, not too expensive, and low in maintenance and service costs. Productive, long-lasting, reliable. An obvious segment, but sadly one without any real participants at the moment.

    Sprinter: Your Premium Choice for Keeping the Market Smaller

    That is because everyone is piled into this segment right now. Your premium choice is what everyone wants. This leaves a huge gap in the market for an OK system that is well-built and can be upgraded with better optics, or a truly value-conscious system.

    Entry Level: Ludospace

    A comparison of entry-level and mid-market polymer powder bed fusion systems. Image courtesy of 3DPrint.com/Joris Peels.

    Now, I’ve never heard the term Ludospace (which is used in France to denote “leisure activity vehicle” or “multi-purpose vehicle” and comes from ludique and monospace) before, but apparently it’s French and is used to describe playful minivans. A small panel van, a car-derived van, and a light commercial vehicle are among the other versions in this segment. We’re talking about a utilitarian, car-like panel van that usually seats four. They are often used in Europe by plumbers and the like. The Volkswagen Caddy, Kangoo, Berlingo, Tourneo Connect, and Peugeot Partner are some versions of these van-like cars.

    In powder bed fusion, these systems usually serve a business purpose. They need to do actual work, actual production. But the systems should be easy to maintain and low-cost to buy. To me, this is the space of the individual inventor. Patricia, who starts her own sunglasses label, produces parts in her own garage. Or Simon, the audiologist who comes up with high-end custom hearing aids made in the Upper East Side. These systems will be made to work day in and day out and be cheaper to buy. People will want to tweak materials and buy their own powder or buy lots of different powders. To me, the HP 1200 stands to completely dominate this segment. Only it will need to either enable PA 11 or lots of materials and settings. The 1200 has a killer purchase price and should be a productive, low-cost system. You could easily use it along with the Magics integration day in and day out. And let’s say that every day you print 25 pairs of sunglasses, you could be doing 750 a month, perhaps? You’d pay off the system in four months. I think that they should offer it for lease for $2000, this will be an amazing proposition for inventors, startups and new production businesses. To me it’s a printer for people who want to sell things directly. Things like, hearing aids made in the store, glasses, custom hearing protection, headphones, custom bike seats, custom tennis racket grips, mouth guards and the like. To me this kind of thing was always impossible because the printers were too sucky, had too little yield or were too expensive.The economics could be the killer part of the 1200. I also would as a print service buy like 4 for every niche material that is important to key customers. So have a black one set up for BMW, TPU for Nike and PA 12 FR for the rail customer. I also think that this could be a machine to sell to print farmers who run thousands of Material Extrusion machines and would want to branch. I think as well that this could enable new localized services that run the 1200 and a few small SLA machines and Material Extrusion machines. Together with workflow solutions this could also be used for spare parts production and distributing digital warehouse products. It may be a great fit in hospitals too. But, the machine is limited in build volume so for some markets with larger parts than the 12 liter, 320 × 165 × 230 mm box can other printers will be better alternatives.

    The Minivan: X1

    Chrysler Pacifica 2026. Image Courtesy of Chrysler

    Now in America, you used to have the much-maligned minivan. More luxurious than a Kangoo, it’s more expensive to maintain and buy. You can’t customize it as much, and it will be set up in the same way for everyone. To me, this market segment is the university (parts production) and the in-house prototyping shop. If you were an architect who wanted to easily print things in your office, you could be a part of this segment. To me, the Formlabs X1 is in this segment. It’s convenient. It will work well with the powders that they provide and consistently spit out parts. But, it will be less durable, less reliable, and cost more per part than the mid-segment. Capex will be significantly less, but materials costs will be higher. You’ll use their software and be happier for it. For the thousands of universities worldwide, the hundreds of university prototyping labs, and architects worldwide, this could become a standard system. The fact that is fits through a normal door is a real winning feature

    Formlabs is good in terms of experience and software. So, overall, the experience will be the key thing for the X1. It will be more expensive than the 1200, and you could probably get two fully loaded 1200s for the price of one X1 with all the accouterments. But if you’re at Nike, you’ll like the experience. And to me this is the key thing, livability, experience.Thats what is so different about the Minivan category. So going forward, in this category think about how you can make the experience better for the user, can we unpack with less hassle, can we create less mess. Think Nespresso, yes it’s horrible coffee but theres no clean up. And I think that this category will be completely different than the preceding and the succeeding one in the future. The minivan is an easy to live with SLS machine while the other two categories are workhorses, durable with high OEE. I think that in the future no one that buys this category of printer will even know what OEE means. But, they’ll love the one click auto unpack shake station.

    If you have a bunch of college kids using it, probably use this one but if you’re going to be making a lot of stuff then the 1200 will be able to make more stuff. But, if you need bigger parts then the X1 will be your choice. Now, if they open it up and it is indeed reliable and repeatable, then this system could also compete in another category, the Vito. The proviso of course is that it is rugged and reliable and stands up to intense use. This remains to be seen.

    Vito: The Workhorse

    To me, this is the category that could end up dominating the entire market. Players would have to significantly reduce the overall system cost for this market to grow. Short-term greed is therefore what is keeping people from this segment. Sinterit is actively trying to make these workhorse systems, but so far has lacked the heft and marketing prowess to do so.

    A sub-$75,000 complete system that is open-powder, open-settings, and has a build volume similar to the X1. The HP 1200 is currently too small. So HP would have to make it bigger but would cannibalize its existing line up if it did so, so probably won´t. Formlabs will have to demonstrate the reliability, repeatability, and longevity of its printers while opening up its materials and settings. As a friend of mine said, ¨the X1 sure looks impressive but it may be a bit Harbor Freight.¨ To the non-Americans Harbor Freight is a company that sells tools to people who don´t use tools or makes tools for those who don´t like tools. Or it’s kind of like a Faux tool. It sure looks like a wrench, has the shape of a wrench but doen´t quite feel wrenchy enough and when you use it, it just doesn´t properly wrench. Its kind of a 3D Trompe l’œil: On the spec sheet the X1 is formidable, we don´t know if it will be so after three years of intensive use.

    Who Wins the Mid-Market Race?

    I believe that for inventors’ small-parts manufacturing, the HP 1200 could be a breakthrough system. Meanwhile, the X1 could push SLS deep into universities and prototyping labs. With some tweaks, these systems or the latest Sinterit offering could become a true industrial workhorse that will make the current SLS industry far, far bigger than it is today. Crucially, in the affordable mid-market and workhorse segments, we see few players active. On the one hand, it’s always easier to be more expensive, and of course, you’d opt to be premium if you could. In the long run, however, a true workhorse machine will be the one that sells the most, and a true allrounder will do the most in revenue. Will companies go that way? Or will the Game of Thrones Trucks Edition have everyone sticking to their guns, keeping the market needlessly small?

  • APAC’s 3D Printing Capital Wave Is Bigger Than Venture Funding

    By the usual measure, a tally of funding rounds, APAC’s additive manufacturing market had a quiet second quarter. The capital that has actually closed across the region comes to about $556M in financing and IPO proceeds. The full set of disclosed commitments runs far higher, close to $2.02B, once planned share placements, announced acquisition consideration, factory capex, and program funding are added to the closed deals. The two numbers describe very different quarters, and the gap between them is the subject of this report.

    The AMPulse data shows a split between attention and money. Product launches were the quarter’s busiest news category in APAC, with 94, well ahead of the 53 funding items. The dollars, though, did not follow the headlines. When a commitment came with a real figure attached, it tended to land in less conspicuous places: production capacity, factory build-outs, thermal-management parts, copper processing, and feedstock.

    The quarter was also narrow. The three largest commitments alone account for roughly $1.43B, or 70.7% of the total disclosed pool; including the top five, the share reaches 88.7%. That concentration is a caveat in its own right: APAC additive manufacturing in Q2 was driven by a small set of platform-scale industrial bets, not by a broad rise across companies of all kinds.

    Product-led attention, infrastructure-led commitments

    Figure 1. What made news against where the money went: AMPulse priority categories versus committed dollars, Q2-to-date through June 26, 2026.

    Based on the AMPulse data, of 354 priority APAC items in the quarter, product activity was the most common thread, 94 entries in all, with funding present but never dominant. Re-sort those same items by the size of the money actually committed, and the picture tilts: away from the volume of product news and toward industrial capacity, thermal management, copper AM, powder supply, and the infrastructure that sits behind printing rather than the printers themselves.

    That divergence is the central finding. Capacity and infrastructure alone make up about 52.3% of the committed pool. Add electronics, thermal management, and copper AM, and the industrial-facing share climbs to roughly 74.4%. Consumer hardware has not gone quiet, but at about 13.9% of committed value it is no longer where the largest commitments are being made.

    Start with closed money

    Begin with the money that has genuinely changed hands. About $393 million arrived in private and growth rounds, another $163 million in net proceeds from Creality‘s Hong Kong listing, for $556 million in all. Two lines deserve an asterisk. Tripo AI’s near-$200 million Series A+/A++ belongs to the AI-to-3D and workflow-software side of the field, not to printer hardware or production capacity. And Ethereal Machines, an advanced-manufacturing and hybrid-CNC company, sits beside AM rather than squarely within it; strip it out, and the closed figure tightens to about $528 million.

    Figure 2. Closed financing and IPO proceeds; Q2-to-date through June 26, 2026, USD millions.

    None of this means consumer hardware has faded. Creality’s IPO, ELEGOO’s Series B+, an undisclosed Series B at Anycubic parent Zongwei Liju, and HeyGears’ Series C all point to durable investor and public-market appetite for desktop, resin, and dental-to-consumer machines. The sharper picture only emerges once those rounds are set apart from the money that is not venture capital at all.

    $2.02B, but not $2.02B raised

    The wider pool reaches about $2.02 billion, but it would be a mistake to read that as $2.02 billion of fresh capital raised. It is a blend of very different commitments: $543 million of planned private-placement capacity at Farsoon, up to $400 million of announced consideration in TDK’s deal for Fabric8Labs, $514 million in capex and project values, and $8.5 million in program funding, layered on top of the closed rounds and IPO proceeds.

    Figure 3. The $2.02 billion by type of money; Q2-to-date through June 26, 2026, USD millions.

    The non-closed, non-financing share of that, roughly $1.47 billion, is worth watching because it shows where the announcements are pointing. But it has to be named accurately. A planned placement, an acquisition price, and a capex budget are not interchangeable with a venture round, however large the combined figure looks.

    The concentration is what a straight funding roundup would miss. Farsoon, Jinshi 3D, and the TDK-Fabric8Labs deal together account for about 70.7% of the pool; add Tripo AI and Creality, and the top five reach 88.7%. Read that way, the quarter looks less like broad market exuberance and more like a handful of large platform, capex, and strategic-acquirer decisions.

    Table 1. Capital taxonomy used in the article

    The table keeps closed financing apart from planned, announced, and project-level values.

    Money type USD Millions Article treatment
    Closed private/growth rounds $393 Closed financing baseline; includes AM-adjacent Tripo AI and Ethereal caveats.
    Closed IPO proceeds $163 Closed public-market proceeds; not venture funding.
    Planned private placement $543 Planned maximum; exclude from closed financing.
    Announced M&A consideration $400 Announced consideration subject to closing/earnout terms.
    Announced capex/projects $514 Industrial project value; not financing raised.
    Government/program commitments $8.5 Program or grant-backed commitments included only when amount is not source-conflicted.

    Most of the signal runs through China

    China sits at the center of both the activity and the value. China-linked items account for 193 of the quarter’s 354 priority entries and about 78.4% of the total committed value. Farsoon, Jinshi 3D, Creality, ELEGOO, Gongda Laser, HeyGears, Youyan Zengcai, and Tripo AI carry that weight across systems, consumer printers, copper and thermal-management work, software, and materials.

    Japan registers differently. It contributes a single line, TDK‘s acquisition of Fabric8Labs, yet that one deal stands for about 19.8% of committed value. So the country tags are best read as APAC linkages rather than a map of headquarters: China is the operating center of gravity, while Japan shows up as strategic capital, drawing AM process know-how into electronics and data-center thermal-management supply chains.

    What the money is actually buying

    Ranked by committed value, the largest segments are industrial metal and polymer systems ($543 million), distributed printing-production infrastructure ($486 million), electrochemical metal AM for thermal management ($400 million), consumer desktop hardware ($236 million), and AI-to-3D software and print-prep tools ($200 million). Lined up, they describe a production stack, not a printer-sales cycle. Capacity and infrastructure account for about 52.3% of committed value; electronics, thermal management, and copper AM add another 22.1%; AI-to-3D software contributes about 9.9%.

    Figure 4. Largest segments by committed value; Q2-to-date through June 26, 2026, USD millions.

    The individual deals tell the same story. Jinshi 3D’s reported Chengdu headquarters and printer-deployment project reads as distributed production infrastructure; Youyan’s metal-powder project is materials capacity. TDK’s purchase of Fabric8Labs is a different kind of move: AM process capability being pulled into electronics and data-center thermal management rather than another OEM raising money to sell machines. Gongda Laser’s green-laser copper AM round points in the same direction. Across these names, electronics, heat transfer, and copper processing continue to emerge as the clearer sources of demand.

    Table 2. Selected APAC AM signal ledger

    Selected capital items from the curated ledger, each with the article’s treatment and any caveats.

    Company Amount (USD Millions) APAC Country / Category Why it matters
    Farsoon Technologies (April 28, 2026) 543 China | Private placement Planned private placement for AM capacity, R&D, industrialization, and global operations.
    TDK / Fabric8Labs (June 10, 2026) 400 Japan | Acquisition Strategic acquisition of ECAM process capability for electronics and data-center thermal management; not target financing.
    Jinshi 3D (May 15, 2026) 486 China | Capex Reported headquarters and printer-deployment capex; not venture financing.
    Tripo AI (June 4, 2026) 200 China | Venture funding AI-to-3D/world-model software layer; relevant to AM workflows, but not printer hardware or production-capacity financing.
    Creality (May 29, 2026) 163 China | IPO Closed IPO proceeds, not venture funding.
    ELEGOO (April 20, 2026) 73.0 China | Venture funding Closed consumer AM hardware Series B+ round.
    Gongda Laser (May 14, 2026) 47.5 China | Venture funding Green-laser/copper AM enabling technology; amount is estimated from the reported range.
    HeyGears (May 14, 2026) 44.0 China | Venture funding Closed dental-to-consumer resin AM Series C round.
    Youyan Zengcai (June 1, 2026) 27.8 China | Capex Metal AM powder capacity project; capex, not financing.
    Ethereal Machines (April 27, 2026) 28.5 India | Venture funding Hybrid CNC/advanced manufacturing; include only with AM-adjacent caveat.

     

    Data, tables, and graphs courtesy of AMPulse Asia