Video idea: Since you're building your own printers, it'd be interesting to hear what in your opinion are the essential features, properties and qualities an industrial printer needs to have.
@feli.x218 for a print farm at the size and scale of slant 3d, i wouldn't use x1c's. I'd go custom like they have. they need full control over every aspect of each printer. Companies like Google and AWS also use bespoke hardware as well rather than try to stay within the confines of the server hardware available from Dell/HPE etc.
I was lucky enough to to visit the Prusa facility and check out their new print farm a few months ago. Its very impressive to see so many printers churning out parts.
Is it possible to do a video on the printers at Slant? Nothing too crazy but things like how it is built, what kind of hot end, bed surface, replacement parts (3d printed vs off the shelf) etc etc etc. Basically a video for us to geek out on and also maybe draw inspiration for our own printers for the cases when things from the hobby printer world overlaps with the printing farm world.
Lake Area Technical College has a farm of 50 Lulzbots including a metal and a carbon fiber Markforged printers. Students also each build a custom printer for class. With those they reach well over 100 printers.
The video didn't mention that many of Slant 3D's prints are automatically ejected by the machine. You mentioned the others require someone to eject them, so I'm surprised you didn't mention that yours doesn't always need a manual ejection!
Invent3D has a pretty large farm if I remember from Joel checking them out. They are a mix of engineered repeatable parts and a 3d printing as a service. Pretty rad! Thanks for the view inside this market.
Heard of a farm in Canada called polyvetica that's pretty low key but they pump out tens of thousands of parts every month. Some of the small businesses I shop at have their products made by them.
Dude, that moon lamp thing is fake. You can even see the spherical spinning molds in the background. Not all manufacturer are fake, but this exact video is fake.
I had the same question. Aside from Prusa i3 mk3 printers, I don't trust any others to be a proven workhorse. Would love to build a printer which has been proven in a print farm and the ones that Slant3d would be awesome.
When is your etsy API comign out? I'm a cad designer in UK and have some parts I would like to sell in USA. Would be interested in linking an on demand print farm to a store so that I can sell the parts abroad.
@@slant3d good to know I'll be looking forward to it and in the meantime potentially set up a Shopify store. Would it be a matter of sending you a file once getting the price so that items can be priced on the store?
Currently I have three machines. They are enders 3 neo's and two are the max running constantly. And I can personally say that running just two machines 24/7 is a pain in the butt. From the occasional part not sticking to the bed for no apparent reason to the bending of the cleaning needles or the fun part when you realize that nozzles are ware item kind of like tires on a car that need to be replaced after so many prints. I'm going a little crazy. And the sad part is that if my business picks up I will need more machines. But 500 plus machines? Is like a masochist wet dream.
The chinese moon lamps are semi 3d printed. You didn't notice the blue bucket of white and those metal spheres at 2:56 ? Maker's Muse made a whole video on them!
These are all really tiny operations compared to any truly industrial scale. I'm sure there's a very obvious tipping point for economies of scale where it makes a whole lot more sense to injection mold than 3d print despite the initial high cost of the molds.
Hmmm. I thought is was bei g original. I've been 3d print farming for about 5 years. (10 printers). I own a maintenance company and I manufacture my own parts for the services to the customers fleet. Some parts cost me $40 and I resell with 20% mark up. But I can 3d print same component for $2.00
True. But it is necessary so that each product creator does not have to consider the operation of a printer farm. We are trying to build the infrastructure that makes it as easy to create a physical product as a to build a website. We're making a manufacturing backend.
@@slant3d sorry I just remember seeing a video calling them out for being fake. Tbh it doesn't matter I just have never seen someone actually purchase any custom ones to verify their claims. But I'm sure with such low production and such high demands the lead times are probably insane. I mean they have a lot of printers but they don't have 10,000 people just placed an order for 5 different custom globes amounts of printers.
Bambu's X1 still has a lot to prove to even be a reliable consumer machine at this point. If you check their support forum, they are breaking and trying to patch them up using 3d printed parts. Not a great start... After a few iterations, they may work out the bugs, will have to see. Not even going into the closed sourced software and hurdles for that presents for automation. In this game, reliability and serviceability trumps all.
@@tshackelton I have not experienced these issues with my X1 Carbon, I have printed close 35KG of filament through it now and have had no severe problems. I did have a clogged nozzle but that was easy to fix. I will try to keep you posted.
At the scale they're trying to operate i would say no. You want to go custom and build printers according to your own specs. easier to get a hold of parts. can make them exactly how you need them and can build out features for them that only a print farm is likely going to need.
So even youtube experts are still getting fooled by the moonlamp 3d print charade too huh. Come on buddy, you're holding yourself out as an expert here.
The biggest print farm is "only" 1300 machines. Sure 1300 machines is a lot but considering one printer probably costs less than 1000 (they don't look that advanced, similar to ender 5 plus). So all their machines might cost less than 1 million. And that's the biggest in the world?
the printers of the first shown farm look to me like Ender3 V2s... or at least pretty close replicas of it, so what's the big deal with saying "they designed the printers them self" (they absolutely did not)
The respectful part is you didn't made 50% about 6 print famrs, and 50% of advertising of your company. You are fair and that's nice
Video idea: Since you're building your own printers, it'd be interesting to hear what in your opinion are the essential features, properties and qualities an industrial printer needs to have.
+1 I would also like to know this information.
Cloud and automated printing and good quality. So a bambu lab x1c is a good start
+1 would love to hear about the key differences, i.e. Motors, software, etc.
@feli.x218 for a print farm at the size and scale of slant 3d, i wouldn't use x1c's. I'd go custom like they have. they need full control over every aspect of each printer. Companies like Google and AWS also use bespoke hardware as well rather than try to stay within the confines of the server hardware available from Dell/HPE etc.
I was lucky enough to to visit the Prusa facility and check out their new print farm a few months ago. Its very impressive to see so many printers churning out parts.
Cool video! The idea with print-farms and the fact you can actually make it work as not just a concept but a real business is so cool!
thank you
Amazing video, Looking forward to more Slant3D content!
Thank you
Is it possible to do a video on the printers at Slant? Nothing too crazy but things like how it is built, what kind of hot end, bed surface, replacement parts (3d printed vs off the shelf) etc etc etc. Basically a video for us to geek out on and also maybe draw inspiration for our own printers for the cases when things from the hobby printer world overlaps with the printing farm world.
+1
Wow I had no idea you had such a massive farm. Cool!
Thanks
Lake Area Technical College has a farm of 50 Lulzbots including a metal and a carbon fiber Markforged printers. Students also each build a custom printer for class. With those they reach well over 100 printers.
I love this so much.
The video didn't mention that many of Slant 3D's prints are automatically ejected by the machine.
You mentioned the others require someone to eject them, so I'm surprised you didn't mention that yours doesn't always need a manual ejection!
I take my hat off to all those entrepreneurs who manage the output of more than one printer. I cannot control mine for consistent prints! Amateur!
MVH studio in Lefkada-Greece has 185 3d printers that prints custom racing wheels
Thanks
Would love to see a video talking about / dedicated to 3d printer design for print farms!!!
Invent3D has a pretty large farm if I remember from Joel checking them out. They are a mix of engineered repeatable parts and a 3d printing as a service. Pretty rad! Thanks for the view inside this market.
Heard of a farm in Canada called polyvetica that's pretty low key but they pump out tens of thousands of parts every month. Some of the small businesses I shop at have their products made by them.
Thanks for letting us know. We will take a look for Part 2
Dude, that moon lamp thing is fake. You can even see the spherical spinning molds in the background. Not all manufacturer are fake, but this exact video is fake.
Where is the spinning mold?
@@SirCutRy 2:56
@@roguecoyote1278 Thanks.
I wouldn’t say “fake”…just that the footage of post processing these isn’t accurate for the subject of 3D printing.
Maker’s Muse did a video about the moon lamps baloney
Do they dry their filament
Really informative about the state of this stuff.
When are you going to open source your printers? I would love you build one.
I had the same question.
Aside from Prusa i3 mk3 printers, I don't trust any others to be a proven workhorse.
Would love to build a printer which has been proven in a print farm and the ones that Slant3d would be awesome.
@@OutsiderDreams Maybe he will be nice and send us the specs, stls....plans???
3DPrintedDebris = ~100 printers
MadeInUrbana = ~100 printers
Galactic Armory = ~85 printers
WindArrow3d = ~65 printers
Good call. We tried to keep this video above 100 printers. But they are all great options for another video.
Why 3DPrintedDebris stopped printing?
2:56 i think this might be a different video. You can see the spherical molds for the moon lamps.
Why is it called a farm and not a factory?
Theres one in Malta as well i believe
When is your etsy API comign out? I'm a cad designer in UK and have some parts I would like to sell in USA. Would be interested in linking an on demand print farm to a store so that I can sell the parts abroad.
Etsy has very bad integrations so likely the Shopify will come out first.
@@slant3d good to know I'll be looking forward to it and in the meantime potentially set up a Shopify store. Would it be a matter of sending you a file once getting the price so that items can be priced on the store?
Currently I have three machines. They are enders 3 neo's and two are the max running constantly. And I can personally say that running just two machines 24/7 is a pain in the butt. From the occasional part not sticking to the bed for no apparent reason to the bending of the cleaning needles or the fun part when you realize that nozzles are ware item kind of like tires on a car that need to be replaced after so many prints. I'm going a little crazy. And the sad part is that if my business picks up I will need more machines. But 500 plus machines? Is like a masochist wet dream.
The Megafarm is set up for 3000 machines
nice video :D
Thanks for watching
Are these large scale 3d printers? How many 3d printers can be handled by a single operator?
In our factories it is about 1 technician to 300 machines
@@slant3d These are small scale printing right??
Any idea if it is for large scale 3d printing. Like the no of technicians required?
The chinese moon lamps are semi 3d printed. You didn't notice the blue bucket of white and those metal spheres at 2:56 ? Maker's Muse made a whole video on them!
The Custom ones are printed the standard moons are rotationally molded.
These are all really tiny operations compared to any truly industrial scale. I'm sure there's a very obvious tipping point for economies of scale where it makes a whole lot more sense to injection mold than 3d print despite the initial high cost of the molds.
Hmmm. I thought is was bei g original. I've been 3d print farming for about 5 years. (10 printers).
I own a maintenance company and I manufacture my own parts for the services to the customers fleet. Some parts cost me $40 and I resell with 20% mark up. But I can 3d print same component for $2.00
Signify has over 500 printers, biggest lighting company in world.
wow
What a great video. Thanks
I'm looking for a partner I only have one 3d printer and so many orders I can't fill
We can probably help with that. Go ahead and shoot over a quote request on the website.
Man.. I thought we were doing good with 138 printers!
how to get lots of clients 🥺
Making and maintaining your own 3d printers must be absorbing so much of your operating revenue?
True. But it is necessary so that each product creator does not have to consider the operation of a printer farm. We are trying to build the infrastructure that makes it as easy to create a physical product as a to build a website. We're making a manufacturing backend.
0:30 they are in fact all ender 5 plus.
Lostboys Lab in Malmö Sweden have over 200 printers
Good call. They downsized quite bit in the last year to focus on filament. But we will definitely look at them again with a new video.
@@slant3d why some large print farms are closing down or changing business focus?
0:34 bruh those just run of the mill creality E5+'s
Why is your top 7 backwards? Starting at number 1 first....
All those globes ate rotational molded. The molds are even in your video...
Only the generic versions. Every custom lamp is printed. That is why they have hundreds of 3D Printers as shown in the video
@@slant3d sorry I just remember seeing a video calling them out for being fake. Tbh it doesn't matter I just have never seen someone actually purchase any custom ones to verify their claims. But I'm sure with such low production and such high demands the lead times are probably insane. I mean they have a lot of printers but they don't have 10,000 people just placed an order for 5 different custom globes amounts of printers.
Have you taken a look at the bambu x1? Maybe that would be a good machine for a print farm.
Bambu's X1 still has a lot to prove to even be a reliable consumer machine at this point. If you check their support forum, they are breaking and trying to patch them up using 3d printed parts. Not a great start... After a few iterations, they may work out the bugs, will have to see. Not even going into the closed sourced software and hurdles for that presents for automation. In this game, reliability and serviceability trumps all.
@@tshackelton I have not experienced these issues with my X1 Carbon, I have printed close 35KG of filament through it now and have had no severe problems. I did have a clogged nozzle but that was easy to fix. I will try to keep you posted.
At the scale they're trying to operate i would say no. You want to go custom and build printers according to your own specs. easier to get a hold of parts. can make them exactly how you need them and can build out features for them that only a print farm is likely going to need.
Ooh, *custom* moonlamps!🙄😏
Im printing one of those on my babmbu labs X1 right now. very cool.
So even youtube experts are still getting fooled by the moonlamp 3d print charade too huh. Come on buddy, you're holding yourself out as an expert here.
7:02 7:10 idk maybe you'd be better off with an off the shelf printer
The biggest print farm is "only" 1300 machines. Sure 1300 machines is a lot but considering one printer probably costs less than 1000 (they don't look that advanced, similar to ender 5 plus). So all their machines might cost less than 1 million. And that's the biggest in the world?
you should print a hat stand so your hat is not stretched out lolz
You definitely forgot the "other" print farms...
such as?
Xometry?
Audio too low
the printers of the first shown farm look to me like Ender3 V2s... or at least pretty close replicas of it, so what's the big deal with saying "they designed the printers them self" (they absolutely did not)
We think you are right. The version they designed did not publically make it to market. And it is unclear if the base machine was modified.
you look like AB de Villiers
Lolz bot is still alive lol completely forgot about them
Wanted to watch. But damn does your audio echo. Soundproof that room and get back to me