3D printing, digital fabrication, additive manufacturing and all that buzz
Quick history of 3D printing
Timeline from makery.info
In a nutshell, 3D printing is a 30-year-old technology that started as a patent-based game in the professional market and during the last decade, just like computers in the 1980s, it became personal. The reason this took so long was a US patent registered by industry leader Stratasys, which described the basics of Fuse Deposit Modelling (FDM). The technology was already commercialised in the 1990s, yet Stratasys was only active in the professional market, making it impossible to acquire an affordable 3D printer for personal use.
Central to the development of 3D printing was a project launched in 2005 by a mechanical engineering professor at the University of Bath, Andrian Bowyer. The project was called RepRap; the first general-purpose self-replicating manufacturing machine (replicating rapid prototyper). RepRap was designed to be a desktop-size machine that could produce most of its components, excluding parts such as electronics, motors, screws etc. Essentially, having these few, relatively inexpensive things, RepRap users could print other RepRaps.
RepRap from Adrian Bowyer on Vimeo.
RepRap is a non-commercial project, so the Stratasys’ patent was not an issue. In a couple of years after the launch of RepRap, small companies started selling RepRap parts and kits; this was actually an infringement on the patent but Stratasys did not stop it. In 2009 though, the famous Stratasys’ patent expired after 20 years. A revolution was in the making, as now-industry leaders in desktop 3D printers manufacturing MakerBot and Ultimaker were launched, gradually dropping the prices of home-use 3D printers. 3D printer sales have been growing ever since, and, as more patents expire, more breakthroughs are upcoming.