POPULARITY
Printing Money is back with Episode 29. Alex Kingsbury (Product Line Manager – AM, nLIGHT) is back. Need we say more to convince you to listen? Either way, we'll say a little more. Episode 29 marks the first recording where Danny and Alex were in the same room. No promises, but maybe we'll add a video element one of these days. Themes from this episode include metal powders transactions, Los Angeles, Hamburg, Australia (not even including Alex's obvious Australian connection), and AM adjacent deals, and a number of follow-on rounds the companies of which we've been tracking on Printing Money for some time now. And yes, we devote some coverage to Nano Dimension! There are, as always, some very memorable lines sprinkled amongst (and very much part of) the fount of knowledge and insight that Danny and Alex offer. Please enjoy Episode 29 and check out our previous episodes too. This episode was recorded May 14, 2025. Timestamps: 00:12 – Welcome to Episode 29 and cheers to that! 01:05 – The Space Coast AM landscape; putting the LA in “Laser” 03:52 – Are there signs of an uptick in 3D printing deals? 04:21 – Metal Powder Works (ASX: MPW) lists publicly in Australia 07:10 – The ASX, no stranger to 3D printing 08:09 – Alloyed raises GBP 37M Series B 11:36 – IperionX (IPX) receives (up to) $47.1M from DoD 13:35 – Government supported AM 14:44 – restor3d raises another $38M 18:24 – PinPrint receives strategic funding from Continuity Biosciences 21:14 – ATLANT 3D raises $15M Series A 22:32 – To some extent the semiconductor industry is 3D printing 23:43 – amsight raises undisclosed seed round 25:07 – 3D Spark raises EUR 2M 26:00 – Kind Designs raises $1M from Overlay Capital 27:16 – Nano Dimension (NNDM) completes Markforged acquisition 29:27 – Ametek (AME) to acquire FARO (FARO) 31:44 – Siemens acquires Wevolver 34:29 – Tethon 3D acquires division from Sintx (SINT) 36:54 – Anzu Partners' buyout of Voxeljet fails 40:24 – Thank you for listening to Episode 29 40:44 – Disclaimer Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only, you should not construe any such information or other material as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice. Nothing stated on this podcast constitutes a solicitation, recommendation, endorsement, or offer by the hosts, the organizer or any third-party service provider to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments in this or in any other jurisdiction in which such solicitation or offer would be unlawful under the securities laws of such jurisdiction. The information on this podcast is of a general nature that does not address the circumstances and risk profile of any individual or entity and should not constitute professional and/or financial advice. Referenced transactions are sourced from publicly available information. Danny Piper is a registered representative of Finalis Securities LLC, member FINRA/SIPC. This material has been prepared for information and educational purposes only, and it is not intended to provide, nor should it be relied on for tax, legal, or investment advice. Investors should consult with their own tax, legal, and financial professionals before investing. Real estate investments are generally highly risky. They can be volatile, unpredictable, illiquid, and are subject to ebbs and flows and market shifts. Investors also risk the loss of all principal investments.
John is joined by Christopher Kercher, partner in Quinn Emanuel's New York office, and Jeffrey Chivers, co-founder of litigation AI company Syllo AI. They discuss the transformative role artificial intelligence played in a recent Quinn Emanuel trial victory in Delaware Chancery Court. The case involved Desktop Metal's attempt to force Nano Dimension to complete a $183 million merger, where Nano tried to stall the deal by slow-walking regulatory approvals by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States until the drop-dead date for the transaction had passed. Quinn Emanuel was hired to represent Desktop Metal only six weeks before trial, requiring an accelerated approach to discovery and case preparation. The team used Syllo AI, a litigation focused product that allowed them to review and organize massive volumes of documents through natural language prompts, create timelines, tag relevant material, and identify patterns much faster than traditional methods. The Syllo platform also integrates multiple AI models that cross-check each other's outputs while following built-in mental models of legal reasoning. During the trial, Syllo customized its tools to provide rapid privilege log and document production deficiency analysis, helping to identify gaps in the opposing side's discovery. The team also worked with Claude, a large language model developed by Anthropic to test ideas, explore potential legal theories, and brainstorm approaches to witness examinations. Syllo and Claude helped attorneys identify relevant evidence for use in expedited post-trial briefs and suggested potential lines of questioning for depositions. Attorneys directed all AI usage, with Claude serving as a cognitive tool that amplified the legal team's capabilities while the attorneys maintained full responsibility for all work product. AI did not displace anyone on the trial team. Instead, it complemented the attorneys' expertise, enhancing their ability to deliver strategic insights and respond effectively to case developments. It may soon become malpractice not to use AI in trial preparation.Podcast Link: Law-disrupted.fmHost: John B. Quinn Producer: Alexis HydeMusic and Editing by: Alexander Rossi
Mahdi Jamshid, director of market intelligence for leading AM observer Wohlers Associates, joins Smart Industry's Scott Achelpohl to detail Wohlers' brand-new annual report on the additive landscape and chat up the latest maneuvers of industry player Nano Dimension.
Welcome to 2025, and welcome to Printing Money Episode 25! For this episode Danny welcomes back a couple of previous guests: Arno Held (AM Ventures) and startup advisor Tali Rosman. It's a new year so, naturally, this episode has its share of reflecting on the 2024 that was and the 2025 (and beyond) that will be. Danny, Arno, and Tali start off by harkening back one last time to Formnext – what is traditionally the end of the 3D printing year turned out only to be a prelude to a whole lot of industry-shifting news in December. So yes, Danny, Arno and Tali discuss Shapeways' rebirth, Forward AM's insolvency, Velo's restructuring, voxeljet's go-private. And this is all really interesting, but it's only the appetizer. Next, Episode 25 wades into the deep end, analyzing and opining on the goings-on with Nano Dimension. Will the acquisitions of Desktop Metal and Markforged happen? Will the shareholder activists force the company to unwind? And what's this about tin foil hats and Russian oligarchs? After the Nano Dimension discussion, Episode 25 moves on to review some of 2024's venture capital raises, including a few recent ones. Then, Danny, Arno and Tali consider the current artificial intelligence (AI) revolution and how it might dovetail with what's to come for additive manufacturing (AM) this year and further into the future. Please enjoy Episode 25, and please join Danny, Arno, Tali, and your other favorite Printing Money personalities at AM Strategies next month, Feb 4-6 in New York City. This episode was recorded January 8, 2025. Timestamps: 00:14 – Welcome to Episode 25 00:31 – Welcome back to Arno Held (AM Ventures) and Tali Rosman 01:21 – Reflections on Formnext and summing up 2024 03:48 – BASF Forward AM insolvency filing 05:11 – So much happened after Formnext! 07:38 – Shapeways reborn 09:14 – Velo3D (VLDX) restructured 11:31 – Voxeljet acquired by its investor, Anzu Partners 12:10 – Whither Nano Dimension (NNDM), Desktop Metal (DM), and Markforged (MKFG)? 13:11 – A pile of cash, shareholder activism, lawsuits… 15:01 – russianoligarchs.com (That's not a typo!) 17:32 – The Oerlikon (OERLY) connection 21:45 – What should/could Nano Dimension do? 26:35 – Siemens to acquire Altair, 3D Systems selling Geomagic to Hexagon 28:23 – Buyers' market: VC into AM has dropped 80% in twenty-four months 30:33 – Broad themes for 2025: M&A is coming back, Reshoring is now, Materials in focus 35:10 – Fabri raises $5M for investment casting 36:33 – Industrializing AM technology: Conflux raises $11M Series B 38:23 – AM Ventures and HZG Group co-invest on Spectroplast 39:43 – HZG invests in Craftcloud/All3DP 40:31 – AI in the 3D printing industry 41:46 – 1000 Kelvin and Euler deploy AI to 3DP/AM 45:27 – The next wave for 3DP/AM has already gotten started 47:02 – Come meet us at AMS (Feb 4-6 in NYC)! 47:43 – Thanks to Arno and Tali! Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only, you should not construe any such information or other material as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice. Nothing stated on this podcast constitutes a solicitation, recommendation, endorsement, or offer by the hosts, the organizer or any third-party service provider to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments in this or in any other jurisdiction in which such solicitation or offer would be unlawful under the securities laws of such jurisdiction. The information on this podcast is of a general nature that does not address the circumstances and risk profile of any individual or entity and should not constitute professional and/or financial advice. Referenced transactions are sourced from publicly available information.
On the latest episode of our Innovators on Innovators series, Kate Black, the founder and CEO of Atomik AM, is joined by Additive Flow founder and CEO Alexander Pluke. Atomik AM is a manufacturing business that offers licenses to its advanced manufacturing technologies, as well as consultancy and training, while Additive Flow is an additive manufacturing workflow software provider owned by Nano Dimension. Throughout their conversation, Pluke quizzes Black on the need for solutions-focused thinking in manufacturing, the limitations of one-size-fits-all materials in AM, and the opportunities that microstructure control at voxel level could open up. They also tackle the issue of sustainability in manufacturing and the overpromises made by the AM market.
Episode 23 is here, and it's chock-full. Alex Kingsbury, nLIGHT Market Development Manager and, not to mention, co-creator of the Printing Money podcast, re-joins Danny and the result is 60 minutes of additive manufacturing (AM) deals and analysis. First, we jump right in to cover Nano Dimension's in-progress deals with Desktop Metal and Markforged. Then, we cover services bureaus, major public-private funding news, and a lot of venture capital (VC) raises and financings. Last, we touch on the recent news of the postponement of Formnext Chicago. Here are just a few companies that get mentioned in this episode: Incodema, I3D, KAM, ADDMAN, Sintavia, Stifel North Atlantic, ASTRO America, Summers Value Partners, Stellantis, In-Q-Tel, Embedded Ventures, SpaceX, nTop, Seurat, NVIDIA, AE Ventures, HorizonX, Nimble Partners, AM Ventures, Breakthrough Victoria, Finindus, Sumitomo, and more. Please enjoy Episode 23, and see you later this month at Formnext in Frankfurt, or, as Danny so well puts it, “The Super Bowl of 3D printing." This episode was recorded October 29, 2024. Timestamps: 00:14 – Welcome to Episode 23, and welcome to Alex Kingsbury 01:37 – We have a lot to cover! 02:03 –AMS was a telling preview of 2024 02:53 – Nano Dimension (NNDM) acquiring Desktop Metal (DM) 05:21 – NNDM-DM last steps before closing in Q4 2024 08:04 – Nano Dimension (NNDM) acquiring Markforged (MKFG) 10:25 – An enormous amount of efficiencies 12:09 – How will NNDM, DM, and MKFG integrate? 14:19 – Markforged settles litigation from Continuous Composites 15:41 – ADDMAN acquires KAM 19:18 – AM service bureau markets: All boats are floating in the US, and all boats are sinking in Europe (Or, “Europe makes the printers, The USA prints the parts”) 20:02 – Sandvik divesting investment in BEAMIT 20:26 – Proto Labs closing metal LPBF facility in Germany 23:36 – AM Forward fund is approved by SBIC 26:26 – Restor3d closes $70m financing ($55M equity, $15M debt) 27:56 – 6K $82M Series E round 31:17 – Chromatic3D closes $6M round 32:55 – Freeform raises $14M 35:15 – NVIDIA backs 3D printing! 38:11 – nTop receives investment from NVIDIA 40:34 – AM Ventures' portfolio companies get a boost 40:53 – Conflux raises $11M Series B for heat exchangers 43:58 – Fortius Metals raises $2M from Finindus 45:15 – Sun Metalon raises $21M Series A led by Sumitomo 47:49 – UpNano raises EUR 7M 48:33 – NematX raises EUR 1.5M 50:33 – Mosaic Manufacturing raises CAD 28M 52:01 – Formnext Chicago is postponed 56:55 – See you at Formnext Frankfurt in a few weeks! Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only, you should not construe any such information or other material as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice. Nothing stated on this podcast constitutes a solicitation, recommendation, endorsement, or offer by the hosts, the organizer or any third-party service provider to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments in this or in any other jurisdiction in which such solicitation or offer would be unlawful under the securities laws of such jurisdiction. The information on this podcast is of a general nature that does not address the circumstances and risk profile of any individual or entity and should not constitute professional and/or financial advice. Referenced transactions are sourced from publicly available information.
Like sands through the hourglass, so is the Q2 2024 earnings season. All of the publicly traded 3D printing companies have reported their financials, so it is time to welcome back Cantor Fitzgerald Managing Director Troy Jensen to discuss and analyze the numbers. Problematic balance sheets and challenging operating environments serve as a backdrop for some negative themes including strategic reviews, slashed operating expenses, and dwindling market capitalizations. But it's not all gloom and doom. Nikon SLM Solutions continues to experience growth, and some services and software providers performed well enough too. And through it all, the additive manufacturing (AM) industry is still growing, so Danny and Troy point to some of the private companies where growth seems apparent. AM Research has more than a decade of historical data on private and public 3D printing companies alike and can certainly back up Danny and Troy's thoughts on the privates. Please enjoy Episode 21, and, if you are at IMTS this week, come find Danny, and Troy, and the 3DPrint.com and AM Research teams, all of which will be presenting on either the Formnext Stage or at the Investor Forum. Timestamps: 00:21 – Welcome back, Troy Jensen (Cantor Fitzgerald) 00:50 – See us live at IMTS! 01:32 – Q2 2024 earnings themes 02:20 – 3D Systems (DDD) Q2 2024 (and Q1 2024) earnings 04:55 – Cost cutting at 3D Systems, and some nice new industrial sales, but a dwindling valuation 08:06 – Stratasys (SSYS) Q2 2024 earnings 09:43 – Stratasys sues Bambu Labs 12:01 – Stratasys' strategic review 14:28 – Inkbit, AM Craft, and Stratasys' strategy 15:57 – Speculation: Let Nano Dimension (NNDM) acquire Desktop Metal (DM), and then merge with Nano Dimension? 17:16 – Desktop Metal (DM) Q2 2024 earnings 21:32 – Markforged (MKFG) Q2 2024 earnings 23:00 – Speculation: Should Markforged tie-up with Continuous Composites? 25:25 – Impossible Objects impresses at RAPID 26:15 – Velo3D (VLD) Q2 2024 earnings 26:42 – Nikon SLM Solutions Q2 growth 27:33 – ADDMAN to acquire KAM 28:27 – Speculation: This is the quarter that we find out what happens to Velo3D 30:24 – Reshoring: Nikon SLM rebrands Morf3D into Nikon AM Synergy 31:36 – Formlabs launches Form 4 32:42 – Materialise (MTLS) Q2 2024 earnings 33:58 – Materialise acquires FEops 36:21 – Proto Labs (PRLB) Q2 2024 earnings 36:58 – Xometry (XMTR) Q2 2024 earnings 37:43 – IMTS Investor Forum 38:28 – Shapeways' Netherlands unit gets a bid 39:00 – Q3 2024 earnings preview and episode wrap-up Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only, you should not construe any such information or other material as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice. Nothing stated on this podcast constitutes a solicitation, recommendation, endorsement, or offer by the hosts, the organizer or any third-party service provider to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments in this or in any other jurisdiction in which such solicitation or offer would be unlawful under the securities laws of such jurisdiction. The information on this podcast is of a general nature that does not address the circumstances and risk profile of any individual or entity and should not constitute professional and/or financial advice. Referenced transactions are sourced from publicly available information.
Like sands through the hourglass, so is the Q2 2024 earnings season. All of the publicly traded 3D printing companies have reported their financials, so it is time to welcome back Cantor Fitzgerald Managing Director Troy Jensen to discuss and analyze the numbers. Problematic balance sheets and challenging operating environments serve as a backdrop for some negative themes including strategic reviews, slashed operating expenses, and dwindling market capitalizations. But it's not all gloom and doom. Nikon SLM Solutions continues to experience growth, and some services and software providers performed well enough too. And through it all, the additive manufacturing (AM) industry is still growing, so Danny and Troy point to some of the private companies where growth seems apparent. AM Research has more than a decade of historical data on private and public 3D printing companies alike and can certainly back up Danny and Troy's thoughts on the privates. Please enjoy Episode 21, and, if you are at IMTS this week, come find Danny, and Troy, and the 3DPrint.com and AM Research teams, all of which will be presenting on either the Formnext Stage or at the Investor Forum. Timestamps: 00:21 – Welcome back, Troy Jensen (Cantor Fitzgerald) 00:50 – See us live at IMTS! 01:32 – Q2 2024 earnings themes 02:20 – 3D Systems (DDD) Q2 2024 (and Q1 2024) earnings 04:55 – Cost cutting at 3D Systems, and some nice new industrial sales, but a dwindling valuation 08:06 – Stratasys (SSYS) Q2 2024 earnings 09:43 – Stratasys sues Bambu Labs 12:01 – Stratasys' strategic review 14:28 – Inkbit, AM Craft, and Stratasys' strategy 15:57 – Speculation: Let Nano Dimension (NNDM) acquire Desktop Metal (DM), and then merge with Nano Dimension? 17:16 – Desktop Metal (DM) Q2 2024 earnings 21:32 – Markforged (MKFG) Q2 2024 earnings 23:00 – Speculation: Should Markforged tie-up with Continuous Composites? 25:25 – Impossible Objects impresses at RAPID 26:15 – Velo3D (VLD) Q2 2024 earnings 26:42 – Nikon SLM Solutions Q2 growth 27:33 – ADDMAN to acquire KAM 28:27 – Speculation: This is the quarter that we find out what happens to Velo3D 30:24 – Reshoring: Nikon SLM rebrands Morf3D into Nikon AM Synergy 31:36 – Formlabs launches Form 4 32:42 – Materialise (MTLS) Q2 2024 earnings 33:58 – Materialise acquires FEops 36:21 – Proto Labs (PRLB) Q2 2024 earnings 36:58 – Xometry (XMTR) Q2 2024 earnings 37:43 – IMTS Investor Forum 38:28 – Shapeways' Netherlands unit gets a bid 39:00 – Q3 2024 earnings preview and episode wrap-up Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only, you should not construe any such information or other material as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice. Nothing stated on this podcast constitutes a solicitation, recommendation, endorsement, or offer by the hosts, the organizer or any third-party service provider to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments in this or in any other jurisdiction in which such solicitation or offer would be unlawful under the securities laws of such jurisdiction. The information on this podcast is of a general nature that does not address the circumstances and risk profile of any individual or entity and should not constitute professional and/or financial advice. Referenced transactions are sourced from publicly available information.
Another month, another episode of Printing Money. For Episode 20, Danny is joined by Rajeev Kulkarni. Rajeev worked at 3D Systems for more than twenty-five years, the last number of which saw him at the forefront of a plethora of asset sales and acquisitions. Now, Rajeev is on his own and works with three 3D printing startups: Axtra3D, Caracol, and Ackuretta. We are thankful to have Rajeev for this episode and we are sure you the listener will appreciate it too. The previous episode featured Cantor's Troy Jensen and therefore centered on quarterly earnings reports. The episode prior to that, we had Mark Burnham from the Additive Manufacturing Coalition to discuss their DC fly-in. So, it's been some time since we've focused on deals and market activity, and this episode had plenty to cover. In Episode 20 of Printing Money Danny and Rajeev discuss: Nano Dimension's (NNDM) announced acquisition of Desktop Metal (DM) BASF's spin out of Forward AM, Formlabs buying a company mid-Kickstarter campaign, VC raises including Mantle, Rapid Liquid Print, and Inkbit, financial doings from Divergent, the death of Shapeways, and plenty more. Please enjoy Episode 20! Timestamps: 00:22 – Welcome to our guest, Rajeev Kulkarni 01:15 – Rajeev's career history: From 25 years at 3D Systems 03:55 – A company of many platforms 06:40 – M&A at 3D Systems 09:02 – Is consolidation the answer? 12:56 – The composites industry as analog for the 3DP/AM industry 16:03 – Scalability, market penetration, and (ensuing) profitability 18:43 – Nano Dimension (NNDM) to acquire Desktop Metal (DM) 25:48 – More consolidation shoes to drop? Or collaboration? Or closure? 28:27 – Twenty-seven 3D printing startups in eight countries 31:54 – BASF spins out Forward AM 37:07 – Formlabs acquires Micronics mid-Kickstarter campaign 39:07 – Sinterit raises $1.85M bridge round 40:00 – Tech Soft 3D acquires Actify 41:45 – NSL Analytical acquired by PE firm Levine Leichtman 41:58 – Indurate Alloys acquired by Wall Colmonoy 42:22 – Materialise acquires FEops 43:42 – Mantle raises $20M Series C 45:59 – Inkbit raises $19M round including strategic Ingersoll Rand 48:14 – Rapid Liquid Print raises $7M led by HZG and BMW Ventures 49:30 – Quantica raises EUR 20M 50:57 – Scrona raises $5M round 52:13 – Divergent3D receives $47M term loan from Bridge Bank 54:32 – Stratasys invests in AM Craft 56:42 – Solideon raises $5M 57:22 – Craft Health raises $1M bridge round 57:42 – Sanofi invests in CTIBiotech 57:55 – RIP Shapeways 1:01:22 – AM Research publishes Q1 2024 3DP/AM market data; 8% year over year growth 1:03:01 – Thank you to Rajeev, and closing remarks Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only, you should not construe any such information or other material as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice. Nothing stated on this podcast constitutes a solicitation, recommendation, endorsement, or offer by the hosts, the organizer or any third-party service provider to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments in this or in any other jurisdiction in which such solicitation or offer would be unlawful under the securities laws of such jurisdiction. The information on this podcast is of a general nature that does not address the circumstances and risk profile of any individual or entity and should not constitute professional and/or financial advice. Referenced transactions are sourced from publicly available information.
The Daily Business and Finance Show - Monday, 25 December 2023 We get our business and finance news from Seeking Alpha and you should too! Subscribe to Seeking Alpha Premium for more in-depth market news and help support this podcast. Free for 14-days! Please click here for more info: Subscribe to Seeking Alpha Premium News Today's headlines: What can investors learn from James Bennet's New York Times takedown? Bayer says Monsanto won Roundup case in California Intel's future may be turning around. One firm thinks it eventually splits up. Nano Dimension offers to buy Stratasys for $16.50 a share (update) M&A activity expected to pick up in 2024, bankers say Airline profits set to take off in 2024 Manchester United agrees to sell 25% stake to billionaire Jim Ratcliffe for $1.3B Baird names top medtech picks for 2024; bullish on Alcon, Axonics Explanations from OpenAI ChatGPT API with proprietary prompts. This podcast provides information only and should not be construed as financial or business advice. This podcast is produced by Klassic Studios Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Daily Business and Finance Show - Sunday, 24 December 2023 We get our business and finance news from Seeking Alpha and you should too! Subscribe to Seeking Alpha Premium for more in-depth market news and help support this podcast. Free for 14-days! Please click here for more info: Subscribe to Seeking Alpha Premium News Today's headlines: Tesla: What to expect in 2024 Quants and short traders both love these stocks - who wins out? Crypto stocks Marathon, Coinbase, Riot dominate week's financial movers Nano Dimension offers to buy Stratasys for $16.50 a share EWT, DAPP and BKCH among weekly ETF movers Wheels Up soars to top industrial gainer of week, earnings drag down FedEx Explanations from OpenAI ChatGPT API with proprietary prompts. This podcast provides information only and should not be construed as financial or business advice. This podcast is produced by Klassic Studios Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On the last Additive Insight podcast episode of the year, the TCT editorial team sits down to pick the bones out of an eventful 2023. Over the course of 90 minutes, TCT Head of Content Laura Griffiths, TCT Group Content Manager Sam Davies, and Junior Content Producer Oli Johnson assess the launches, bounces and mergers from January through to December. Their conversation spans from the closing of Nikon's SLM Solutions acquisition to the never-ending saga surrounding Stratasys, Desktop Metal, 3D Systems and Nano Dimension. From 3D printed basketballs to 3D printed rockets. And from Chicago to Shanghai. It has been a year of highs and lows, ups and downs, and the TCT editorial team share their thoughts on it all in this Additive Insight episode.
We speak to industry legend Richard Darling about his new role as Sales and Marketing Director at Global Inkjet Systems – a division of Nano Dimension.We talk about his new position, his vast experience and his vision on the future of Industrial Inkjet projects.
In der heutigen Folge „Alles auf Aktien“ sprechen die Finanzjournalisten Philipp Vetter und Holger Zschäpitz über den Kurssprung bei der Deutschen Bank, Metas unfreiwillige Argumente für seine Ankläger und Luxus-Enttäuschung bei Kering. Außerdem geht es um Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, Deutsche Telekom, Beiersdorf, Porsche AG, Gucci, Worldline, Danaher, Thermo Fisher, Mobileye, SolarEdge Technologies, Plus500, WalkMe, InMode, Nano Dimension, Cyberpark Software, CAB Payments Holdings, Adyen, Kaspi, Paypal, Block, Mastercard, Visa, Nu Bank, Inter & Co., Affirm, Wise, Coinbase, Amazon, Xtrackers MSCI Fintech Innovation ETF (WKN: DBX0R1), Invesco KBW NASDAQ Fintech (WKN: A2DHWJ), Global X FinTech ETF (WKN: A2QPBZ). Wir freuen uns an Feedback über aaa@welt.de. Ab sofort gibt es noch mehr "Alles auf Aktien" bei WELTplus und Apple Podcasts – inklusive aller Artikel der Hosts und AAA-Newsletter.[ Hier bei WELT.](https://www.welt.de/podcasts/alles-auf-aktien/plus247399208/Boersen-Podcast-AAA-Bonus-Folgen-Jede-Woche-noch-mehr-Antworten-auf-Eure-Boersen-Fragen.html.) Disclaimer: Die im Podcast besprochenen Aktien und Fonds stellen keine spezifischen Kauf- oder Anlage-Empfehlungen dar. Die Moderatoren und der Verlag haften nicht für etwaige Verluste, die aufgrund der Umsetzung der Gedanken oder Ideen entstehen. Hörtipps: Für alle, die noch mehr wissen wollen: Holger Zschäpitz können Sie jede Woche im Finanz- und Wirtschaftspodcast "Deffner&Zschäpitz" hören. Außerdem bei WELT: Im werktäglichen Podcast „Kick-off Politik - Das bringt der Tag“ geben wir Ihnen im Gespräch mit WELT-Experten die wichtigsten Hintergrundinformationen zu einem politischen Top-Thema des Tages. Mehr auf welt.de/kickoff und überall, wo es Podcasts gibt. +++ Werbung +++ Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? [**Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte!**](https://linktr.ee/alles_auf_aktien) Impressum: https://www.welt.de/services/article7893735/Impressum.html Datenschutz: https://www.welt.de/services/article157550705/Datenschutzerklaerung-WELT-DIGITAL.html Ab sofort gibt es noch mehr "Alles auf Aktien" bei WELTplus und Apple Podcasts – inklusive aller Artikel der Hosts und AAA-Newsletter.[ Hier bei WELT.](https://www.welt.de/podcasts/alles-auf-aktien/plus247399208/Boersen-Podcast-AAA-Bonus-Folgen-Jede-Woche-noch-mehr-Antworten-auf-Eure-Boersen-Fragen.html.) Disclaimer: Die im Podcast besprochenen Aktien und Fonds stellen keine spezifischen Kauf- oder Anlage-Empfehlungen dar. Die Moderatoren und der Verlag haften nicht für etwaige Verluste, die aufgrund der Umsetzung der Gedanken oder Ideen entstehen. Hörtipps: Für alle, die noch mehr wissen wollen: Holger Zschäpitz können Sie jede Woche im Finanz- und Wirtschaftspodcast "Deffner&Zschäpitz" hören. Außerdem bei WELT: Im werktäglichen Podcast „Kick-off Politik - Das bringt der Tag“ geben wir Ihnen im Gespräch mit WELT-Experten die wichtigsten Hintergrundinformationen zu einem politischen Top-Thema des Tages. Mehr auf welt.de/kickoff und überall, wo es Podcasts gibt. +++ Werbung +++ Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte! https://linktr.ee/alles_auf_aktien Impressum: https://www.welt.de/services/article7893735/Impressum.html Datenschutz: https://www.welt.de/services/article157550705/Datenschutzerklaerung-WELT-DIGITAL.html
In this bonus episode, Alex and Danny interview Ric Fulop, co-founder and CEO of Desktop Metal. Desktop Metal has recently concluded merger talks with Stratasys after a shareholder vote led to a termination of the deal. In this interview, Ric dives into his motivations for the merger, and shares much of the background context on Desktop Metal's history with Stratasys, plus other players such as Nano Dimension and 3D Systems. Additionally, Alex and Danny dive into some of the history around Desktop Metal, Ric's move from VC back into the entrepreneurial world, his thesis for forming Desktop Metal, motivations for the SPAC, and the acquisition strategy thereafter. 0.00: Intros 3.56: Ric's background and DM's history 11.20: Development and launch of DMs Production System 15.45: Ric's move from VC to Founder 17.50: DMs fundraising prior to their SPAC 22.05: The reasons DM listed via a SPAC 26.45: DM's acquisition strategy and early talks with ExOne 28.07: DMs initial offer to acquire Stratasys in January 2021 31.26: DM's acquisition of EnvisionTEC and Adaptive3D 34.39: Nano Dimension's offers to acquire Desktop Metal 38.25: 3D Systems offers put to Stratasys 39.14: Termination of merger with Desktop Metal and Stratasys 40.55: Did Stratasys shareholders make the wrong decision? 45.17: Latest DM financials and cost savings 48.35: Integration strategy of DM of the acquired companies 51.55: What will Nano Dimension, 3D Systems and Stratasys do next? 54.32: Potential for another Desktop Metal merger in future? 55.50: Any future Desktop Metal acquisitions? 57.55: Wrap-up
A summer slow down in financings means that Troy, Danny, and Alex get to spend more time on acquisitions and the public markets this episode. Two acquisitions are up for discussion: SLM Solutions purchase of Adira Addcreative, and that of Xerox's Elem Additive by ADDiTEC. Next, the public markets have just completed Q2 reporting, so Troy Jensen, Senior Research Analyst from Lake Street Capital gives his market roundup. Together, Troy, Danny, and Alex continue the discussion on the Stratasys-3D Systems-Desktop Metal-Nano Dimension merger fest, and also consider the positions of Markforged and Velo3D. Then the trio discuss the 3D printing service bureaus, both publicly listed and also non-public, and how private equity is moving in the 3D printing industry. 0.48: Summer slowdown in financings 1.42: SLM Solutions acquires Adira Addcreative 6.25: ADDiTEC acquires Elem Additive 11.05: OEM public companies general commentary 12.27: Velo3D Q2 results and $70 million convertible offering 13.28: Markforged Q2 results, rumors of new machine and share price movement 16.10: Nano Dimension, Markforged, Velo3D results and merger discussion 20.22: Desktop Metal has a healthy Q2 21.08: 3D Systems faces challenging conditions in dental and industrial 22.13: Stratasys Q2 and negotiation tactics with 3D Systems 27.40: Consolidation in the industry and need for scale 29.23: Service bureau public companies general commentary: Fathom, Protolabs, Xometry, Shapeways 33.41: Market dynamics for 3d printing service bureaus, both public and private 41.07: Data disclaimer This content is for informational purposes only, you should not construe any such information or other material as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice. Nothing stated on this podcast constitutes a solicitation, recommendation, endorsement, or offer by the hosts, the organizer or any third-party service provider to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments in this or in any other jurisdiction in which such solicitation or offer would be unlawful under the securities laws of such jurisdiction. The information on this podcast is of a general nature that does not address the circumstances and risk profile of any individual or entity and should not constitute professional and/or financial advice.
Wer die aktuellen Übernahmeaktivitäten von Stratasys, 3D Systems, Nano Dimension und Desktop Metal verfolgt hat stellt sich sicher auch die Frage, was geht dort nur ab? Wie soll man das bewerten? Ist das gut oder schlecht? Welche Auswirkungen kann das haben? Genau dies bespreche ich heute in dieser 3D-Druck Interview-Podcast Folge mit Hanz-Alfred Breuninger.
In what is shaping up to be the biggest deal in the 3D printing industry of 2023, Stratasys and Desktop Metal will combine to form a $1.8 billion company. Alex and Danny unpack the particulars of the deal, including some of the motivations behind it, namely repeated takeover attempts of Stratasys by Nano Dimension. The product portfolios of both Stratasys (Nasdaq: SSYS) and Desktop Metal (NYSE: DM) are discussed in relation to what the merged company may look like, how it may operate, and what potential cost savings are realistic. Additionally, ramifications for the broader industry and current listed companies are unpacked. The merger is still subject to shareholder approval however, so the value of this merger for shareholders on both sides is examined.
Simon Edwards is Product Champion for Global Inkjet Systems (GIS), a Nano Dimension division. In a wide-ranging interview, Frazer and Simon discuss the ability of this powerful software to provide an integrated platform technology via the GIS components for digital print systems. Along the way, they also manage to cover print technology engineering hubs, inkjet industry collaboration and synergies, the future for AI machine learning technologies – and touch upon whether the time has come for digital printing in the Packaging and Labels sector to really take off?Subscribe to the FuturePrint podcast nowVisit the EcoPrint websiteVisit the FuturePrint websiteVisit the GIS websiteConnect with Simon Edwards on LinkedInConnect with Frazer Chesterman on LinkedIn
We visit the Australian Manufacturing Pavilion at AMW as well as the Electronex (Electronics Design and Assembly) Expo. At Electronex we talk to Successful Endeavours about designing and distributing electronics in Australia, Nano Dimension about enabling sovereign capability utilising 3D printed circuit boards and robotic assembly, and SMCBA (Surface Mount & Circuit Board Association) about their work. At AMW SEMMA (South East Melbourne Manufacturing Alliance) shares their work on advocating local manufacturing capability and collaboration, Integra Systems about on-shore industrial product engineering and the Victorian Govt Digital Jobs for Manufacturing initiative, and wrap with a chat with the folk at the Australian Made Campaign.
Special guest Troy Jensen, Senior Research Analyst with Lake Street Capital Markets, joins Alex and Danny for a closer look at some of the biggest publicly listed 3d printing companies. In this episode Alex, Danny, and Troy discuss the hostile takeover attempt of Stratasys by Nano Dimension, 3D Systems' performance and valuation, Desktop Metal versus Markforged, Velo3D's point of difference. They then take a look at the services companies such as Protolabs, Xometry, and Fathom. A recent VC financing for Makerverse is also covered, as well as notable acquisitions by Stratasys and Nexa3D. With the recent release of numerous additive manufacturing market reports, Alex, Danny and Troy reflect on this fresh dataset as it relates to investor appetite within the 3D printing industry. This content is for informational purposes only, you should not construe any such information or other material as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice. Nothing stated on this podcast constitutes a solicitation, recommendation, endorsement, or offer by the hosts, the organizer or any third-party service provider to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments in this or in any other jurisdiction in which such solicitation or offer would be unlawful under the securities laws of such jurisdiction. The information on this podcast is of a general nature that does not address the circumstances and risk profile of any individual or entity and should not constitute professional and/or financial advice.
DE editors discuss NVIDIA GTC, ASSESS, Nano Dimension's offer to acquire Stratasys, ChaptGPT's impact on simulation, OzenCon, and more
DE editors discuss NVIDIA GTC, ASSESS, Nano Dimension's offer to acquire Stratasys, ChaptGPT's impact on simulation, OzenCon, and more
Episode 91: Ben and Steve are excited to go to Automate! Stephen talks about his trip filming in Detroit and the rental car he drove. Benjamin loves clamps but thinks Nano Dimension's takeover bid for Stratasys isn't cool. Steve closes with thoughts on companies failing to play nice and follow the rules. - https://www.ctemag.com/news/industry-news/clamping-technology-supports-high-end-parts-production - https://3dprintingindustry.com/news/nano-dimension-launches-1-1-billion-takeover-bid-for-stratasys-221128/ - https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2023/03/13/2625705/0/en/Oqton-and-Baker-Hughes-Enter-Commercial-Agreement-to-Offer-Most-Comprehensive-Software-Suite-for-Production-Scale-Additive-Manufacturing.html Connect with the Manufacturing Industry here https://www.amtonline.org/events Discover the past, present, and future of American manufacturing with https://www.mmsonline.com/madeintheusapodcast Explore, watch, read, learn, join, and connect at https://www.imts.com/ Tune in to the AM Radio podcast https://www.additivemanufacturing.media/zc/am-radio-podcast For the latest in Manufacturing Technology news https://www.amtonline.org/resources Produced by Ramia Lloyd
As the additive manufacturing industry continues to rapidly grow and evolve, so too does the financing that enables the technology innovation. ‘Printing Money' takes a deeper look at the transactions behind some of the most innovative 3D printing businesses. Episode 1 sees us unpack the current state of the 3D printing public markets and M&A activity, covering Nano Dimension's (Nasdaq: NNDM) offer to acquire Stratasys (Nasdaq: SSYS), Sigma Additive, SLM Solutions/Nikon acquisition closing; and two recent private equity deals: SyBridge Technologies and ADDMAN Engineering. Disclaimer on No Investment Advice: The Content is for informational purposes only, you should not construe any such information or other material as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice. Nothing stated on this podcast constitutes a solicitation, recommendation, endorsement, or offer by the hosts, the organizer or any third-party service provider to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments in this or in any other jurisdiction in which such solicitation or offer would be unlawful under the securities laws of such jurisdiction. The information on this podcast is of a general nature that does not address the circumstances and risk profile of any individual or entity and should not constitute professional and/or financial advice.
US futures are pointing to a lower open as of 04:05 ET. European equity markets have opened with losses, following sharply lower levels in Asia. Fed terminal rate expectations continue to rise higher with markets now pricing in peak of 5.5-5.75%. A 50bp March rate hike is now the consensus, though it might take a significant NFP miss to shift forecast back down to 25bp.Companies Mentioned: SVB Financial Group, Tesla, Stratasys, Nano Dimension
Nano Dimension is back in the news this week with a series of strongly-worded investor briefs - what is going on here? Tate and Tyler try to catch-up on this Bermuda Triangle of hostile takeover attempts. Tate revisits a 2020 Olympics tragedy and 3D printing's (minor) spotlight in Super Bowl LVII Read the handlebar failure report here.
The dream of 3D Printing was to create a device in a single print but the truth is we've really only printed parts in single materials. With AME (Additive Manufactured Electronics) this dream has the potential to become reality and one of the leaders in applying AME is Nano Dimension. I talked to their General Manager EMEA, Valentin Storz about the technology, its adoption is specific industries and about their acquisition of Essemtec just over twelve months ago. Like every episode of EMS@C-Level, this one was sponsored by global inspection leader Koh Young (https://www.kohyoung.com) and Manufacturing Autonomy Specialist CloudNC (https://www.cloudnc.com). If you want to see AME in action you can visit Nano Dimension at electronica on booth 507 in Hall B1. You can also find out more about them, their equipment and the applications it has been used on by visiting https://www.nano-di.com/Like every episode of EMS@C-Level, this one was sponsored by global inspection leader Koh Young (https://www.kohyoung.com) and Adaptable Automation Specialist Launchpad.build (https://launchpad.build).You can see video versions of all of the EMS@C-Level pods on our YouTube playlist.
What happens when one public company purchases a chunk of another public company on the open market? Is 3D printing about to have it's Elon-esque "hostile takeover" moment? Tate and Tyler discuss the recent news involving Nano Dimension and Stratasys.
On this week's Additive Insight podcast, the TCT editorial team is back for another editorial roundtable covering the biggest 3D printing and additive manufacturing news from the last month. Editors Laura Griffiths and Sam Davies discuss some major acquisitions including news that Nano Dimension has taken a 12% in Stratasys, and Markforged's recent addition of binder jet to its portfolio with the acquisition of Digital Metal. The team also take a look at the next generation of Formlabs selective laser sintering technology with the launch of the Fuse 1+ 30W, and explore new stats from CONTEXT which show a complete reversal of 3D printer shipment trends seen throughout 2020. Learn more about ultrafast 3D printing on the desktop with the XiP 3D printer from our episode sponsor Nexa3D: mytct.co/nexa3dpod
SHOW NOTES Additive manufacturing is realizing new possibilities for components at the extremes of size range. In this episode, Peter Zelinski and Julia Hider discuss micro 3D printing via DLP as well as large scale 3D printing enabled by robots, FDM, wire arc additive manufacturing (WAAM) and more. This episode is brought to you by PTXPO. Mentioned in this episode: Nano Dimension's Fabrica 2.0 (after this article was written, Nanofabrica was acquired by Nano Dimension, and the Tera 250 was renamed the Fabrica 2.0) Micro 3D printed electrical connectors from Boston Micro Fabrication Micro 3D printed eye stents for glaucoma surgery by Boston Micro Fabrication Micro injection mold shop Accumold's use of the Fabrica 2.0 Wire-arc additive manufacturing at Lincoln Electric Additive Solutions Additive Engineering Solutions using a BAAM machine from Cincinnati Incorporated for tooling Autonomous underwater vehicle hull sections 3D printed by Additive Engineering Solutions using BAAM Flight simulator cockpit 3D printed by Additive Engineering Solutions using BAAM Aerospace AM company Sintavia designed its facility with the expectation that laser powder bed fusion machines will become larger
ARK Invest has prominently featured 3D Printing stocks in ARKK, ARKQ, ARKX, and PRNT. Cathie Wood has been holding stocks like NNDM (Nano Dimension stock), MTLS (Materalise stock), PRLB (Proto Labs stock), and DM (Desktop Metal stock) for years while calling for the 3D printing boom since the very start of @ARK Invest . It's actually been one of their Big Ideas since they began publishing it! So, are any of these 3D printing stocks the best stocks to buy now?
In this series of more than a dozen pre-show interviews Philip Stoten speaks to the exhibitors of Productronica 2021 about their expectations for the show and the new products they will be promoting. Philip and his guests also explore the latest trends in the European manufacturing industry. In this episode Philip's guest is Valentin Storz, General manager EMAE, Nano DimensionLike every episode of EMS@C-Level, this one was sponsored by global inspection leader Koh Young (https://www.kohyoung.com) and Adaptable Automation Specialist Launchpad.build (https://launchpad.build).You can see video versions of all of the EMS@C-Level pods on our YouTube playlist.
Amit Dror is cofounder of Nano Dimension and customer success officer. Amit served as Nano Dimension's chief executive from 2014 to 2019. Nano Dimension has produced a product which, arguably can be best described as a true disruptive force within the electronic assembly space. We're all experienced with inkjet printers. Ink jet nozzles travel from left to right back and forth over a sheet of paper. When the printing process has been completed, out shoots a sheet of paper with text or images deposited on the paper's surface. Now, imagine a different type of printer. Instead of four-color ink cartridges there are two basic inks, one a dielectric ink and the other a silver-based conductive ink. The print heads travel back and forth and, when the printing process is finished, out pops a multilayer circuit board complete with vias, through-holes, ground planes, and conductive traces, and markings, ready for component placement and reflow. Need another board, just press print. This technology gives new meaning to "printed circuit board." This podcast is brought to you by Turnkey PRO from Sierra Circuits. What if you could source your components, upload your specs and receive an instant quote in less than 15 minutes? What if your designs could be fabricated, assembled and delivered to your door in five days with a guarantee of zero defects? Then try Turnkey PRO by Sierra Circuits for your next design, and use promo code PCBCHAT to receive $200 off your next order.
My guest today is AMIT DRORCo-Founder of Nano Dimension Ltd. and Customer Success Officer. Amit served as Nano Dimension's Chief Executive Officer from 2014 to 2019. Nano Dimension has produced a product which, arguably can be best described as a true disruptive force within the electronic assembly space.We're all experienced with inkjet printers. Ink jet nozzles travel from left to right back and forth over a sheet of paper. When the printing process has been completed, out shoots a sheet of paper with text or images deposited on the paper's surface. Now, imagine a different type of printer. Instead of four-color ink cartridges there are two basic inks, one a dielectric ink and the other a silver-based conductive ink. The print heads travel back and forth and, when the printing process is finished, out pops a multi-layer circuit board complete with vias, through-holes, ground planes, and conductive traces, and markings, ready for component placement and reflow. Need another board, just press print. This technology gives new meaning to "printed circuit board".Amit DrorCo-Founder of Nano Dimension Ltd. and Customer Success OfficerNano Dimensionnano-di.comNANO DIMENSION USA INC.13798 NW 4th Street, Suite 315Sunrise, FL 33325, United States NANO DIMENSION (ISRAEL) 2 Ilan Ramon St. Ness-Ziona Science Park Ness Ziona 7403635, IsraelNANO DIMENSION (HK) LTD.Unit 202. 2/F, Lakeside 2, Phase Two,Hong Kong Science Park, Pak Shek Kok,New Territories, Hong Kong
Basic understanding of Market Cap to have a small scope into a company's value. Also we'll discuss Nano Dimension, an Israeli company that makes a 3D printer for chips and other circuitry. May be a vital tool for space exploration.
The CEO of Nano Dimension (NNDM), Yoav Stern, says that the company's 3D-printing machines are used to print electronic circuits, in addition to bridging the gap between PCB and semiconductor integrated circuits.
丽莎老师讲机器人之世界首块10层3D打印PCB电路板欢迎收听丽莎老师讲机器人,想要孩子参加机器人竞赛、创意编程、创客竞赛的辅导,找丽莎老师!欢迎添加微信号:153 5359 2068,或搜索钉钉群:31532843。2020年5月19日,德国慕尼黑和佛罗里达州博卡拉顿,传感器解决方案供应商HENSOLDT与领先的3D打印电子(AME)/印刷电子(PE)供应商Nano Dimension合作,在利用3D打印技术开发高性能电子元件的过程中取得了重大突破。利用Nano Dimension公司新开发的介电聚合物油墨和导电油墨,HENSOLDT公司成功地组装出了世界上第一块10层3D打印电路板(PCB),电路板的两面都焊接了高性能的电子结构。在此之前,3D打印电路板无法承受元件双面口的焊接工艺。HENSOLDT于2016年开始与Nano Dimension的DragonFly 3D打印系统合作,以研究3D打印电子产品的可能性。2019年,HENSOLDT成功实施了LDM打印技术,这是行业内唯一的3D打印电子电路的快速成型制造平台。电路3D打印技术原理电子电路3D打印技术在生产前验证新设计和专用电子元件的功能是非常有用的,是一种高度敏捷和个性化的工程方法,用于新的电子电路原型设计。这使得开发过程中的时间和成本大大减少。此外,在开始生产之前就能提供经过验证和批准的设计,从而提高了最终产品的质量。同时进行多种材料的增材制造这种种革命性的方法,可以帮助重新定义未来的电子产品的属性,包括密度,尺寸和灵活性。至少 配有两个打印头,一个用于纳米银导电墨水,另一个用于介电聚合物墨水。允许DragonFly LDM在单个3D打印作业中同时使用两种墨水进行打印。在进行多层电路3D打印的时候,线路的设计走向、层与层直接的间隔距离等问题,一直以来都有大量难题存在。所以,这次10层3D打印电路的突破,是一个新的里程碑。未来的电路3D打印愿景电路3D打印有很多传统PCB工艺所没有的优势:· 自由创新,不受传统制造工艺的限制。· 3D打印电路设计的各个部分,以便进行动态测试。· 无需钻孔或电镀即可创建通孔和通孔。· 只需几个小时即可在内部打印电子电路。· 通过结合复杂的几何形状和新功能的设计,在节省空间,重量和成本的同时,也进行创新。· 简化的工作流程和简单的操作。· 长时间不间断3D打印,可以无人值守。Nano Dimension目前已经能够实现多层的PCB电路3D打印,长期目标是把3D打印电路技术从原型制作到批量生产应用到工业当中去。目前,他们已经把重点转向多品种、小批量的3D增材打印电子电路,例如传感器、天线、射频放大器、电容器等。
丽莎老师讲机器人之世界首块10层3D打印PCB电路板欢迎收听丽莎老师讲机器人,想要孩子参加机器人竞赛、创意编程、创客竞赛的辅导,找丽莎老师!欢迎添加微信号:153 5359 2068,或搜索钉钉群:31532843。2020年5月19日,德国慕尼黑和佛罗里达州博卡拉顿,传感器解决方案供应商HENSOLDT与领先的3D打印电子(AME)/印刷电子(PE)供应商Nano Dimension合作,在利用3D打印技术开发高性能电子元件的过程中取得了重大突破。利用Nano Dimension公司新开发的介电聚合物油墨和导电油墨,HENSOLDT公司成功地组装出了世界上第一块10层3D打印电路板(PCB),电路板的两面都焊接了高性能的电子结构。在此之前,3D打印电路板无法承受元件双面口的焊接工艺。HENSOLDT于2016年开始与Nano Dimension的DragonFly 3D打印系统合作,以研究3D打印电子产品的可能性。2019年,HENSOLDT成功实施了LDM打印技术,这是行业内唯一的3D打印电子电路的快速成型制造平台。电路3D打印技术原理电子电路3D打印技术在生产前验证新设计和专用电子元件的功能是非常有用的,是一种高度敏捷和个性化的工程方法,用于新的电子电路原型设计。这使得开发过程中的时间和成本大大减少。此外,在开始生产之前就能提供经过验证和批准的设计,从而提高了最终产品的质量。同时进行多种材料的增材制造这种种革命性的方法,可以帮助重新定义未来的电子产品的属性,包括密度,尺寸和灵活性。至少 配有两个打印头,一个用于纳米银导电墨水,另一个用于介电聚合物墨水。允许DragonFly LDM在单个3D打印作业中同时使用两种墨水进行打印。在进行多层电路3D打印的时候,线路的设计走向、层与层直接的间隔距离等问题,一直以来都有大量难题存在。所以,这次10层3D打印电路的突破,是一个新的里程碑。未来的电路3D打印愿景电路3D打印有很多传统PCB工艺所没有的优势:· 自由创新,不受传统制造工艺的限制。· 3D打印电路设计的各个部分,以便进行动态测试。· 无需钻孔或电镀即可创建通孔和通孔。· 只需几个小时即可在内部打印电子电路。· 通过结合复杂的几何形状和新功能的设计,在节省空间,重量和成本的同时,也进行创新。· 简化的工作流程和简单的操作。· 长时间不间断3D打印,可以无人值守。Nano Dimension目前已经能够实现多层的PCB电路3D打印,长期目标是把3D打印电路技术从原型制作到批量生产应用到工业当中去。目前,他们已经把重点转向多品种、小批量的3D增材打印电子电路,例如传感器、天线、射频放大器、电容器等。
The use of 3D printing technology to build devices with embedded electronics has evolved. In the early days, special 3D printers injected dielectric inks onto a layer of a build, creating electronic traces, to build electronic parts. Nano Dimension was the first company to develop such a system, and it continues to evolve the technology. Today, it offers Additive Manufacturing Electronics (AME).
Today we chat with CEO Amit Dror, a super positive and awesome company Nano Dimension Ltd. (NASDAQ, TASE: NNDM), founded in 2012, is focused on the research and development of advanced 3D printed electronics, including a 3D printer for multilayer printed circuit boards, and the development of nanotechnology-based conductive and dielectric inks, which are complementary products for 3D printers.CEO,Amit Dror...3Nano Dimension’s novel and proprietary technologies enable the use of conductive and dielectric inks for ultra-rapid prototyping of complex, high-performance multilayer circuit boards. The company’s PCB 3D printer is the result of combining advanced breakthroughs in inkjet technology, 3D printing and nanotechnology. Nano Dimension stocks are traded on the NASDAQ in the U.S. (NNDM) and on the TASE in Israel (NNDM).3D Printing is NOT a relatively new technology but the way they are fast-tracking prototypes for the consumer electronic components modeled with Printer Circuit Boards is changing the game. Following the recent announcement on being uplisted to the NASDAQ in March, what has changed to make your company more flexible as an investment option and has it attracted smart investors who want to get in on this industry? POSITIVE STOCKSWe highlight Stocks that are geared to ramp up. Positivestocks.com platform is primarily used to: (1) create and distribute audio/video based content related to a particular private or public company or an industry in which a company conducts business; (2) append interview-related and other rich media content to traditional press releases; and (3) for registered investment professionals only, to add interview-based audio & video content to financial research. Positivestocks.com content is distributed to 1M individuals online and over 60,000 financial professionals, including North American and international buy-side analysts, investment research professionals and portfolio managers. Positive Stocks specializes in covering Small Cap Stocks & providing Small Cap Investor Awareness Programs. Positive Stocks also offers investing tools to help investors make informed decisions about the small cap stocks they are interested in. Follow Positive Stocks for investment news, expert views, insights & commentary. Positive Stocks is a capital market services & financial communications firm based out of San Diego with a proven track record of positively identifying and launching quick-coverage of highly potential small cap & mid cap stocks at an early stage. Meet the CEO's of some of the most ambitious small cap public companies and influencers within and around the industry.https://www.positivestocks.com
Today we chat with CEO Amit Dror, a super positive and awesome company Nano Dimension Ltd. (NASDAQ, TASE: NNDM), founded in 2012, is focused on the research and development of advanced 3D printed electronics, including a 3D printer for multilayer printed circuit boards, and the development of nanotechnology-based conductive and dielectric inks, which are complementary products for 3D printers.CEO,Amit Dror...3Nano Dimension’s novel and proprietary technologies enable the use of conductive and dielectric inks for ultra-rapid prototyping of complex, high-performance multilayer circuit boards. The company’s PCB 3D printer is the result of combining advanced breakthroughs in inkjet technology, 3D printing and nanotechnology. Nano Dimension stocks are traded on the NASDAQ in the U.S. (NNDM) and on the TASE in Israel (NNDM).3D Printing is NOT a relatively new technology but the way they are fast-tracking prototypes for the consumer electronic components modeled with Printer Circuit Boards is changing the game. Following the recent announcement on being uplisted to the NASDAQ in March, what has changed to make your company more flexible as an investment option and has it attracted smart investors who want to get in on this industry? POSITIVE STOCKSWe highlight Stocks that are geared to ramp up. Positivestocks.com platform is primarily used to: (1) create and distribute audio/video based content related to a particular private or public company or an industry in which a company conducts business; (2) append interview-related and other rich media content to traditional press releases; and (3) for registered investment professionals only, to add interview-based audio & video content to financial research. Positivestocks.com content is distributed to 1M individuals online and over 60,000 financial professionals, including North American and international buy-side analysts, investment research professionals and portfolio managers. Positive Stocks specializes in covering Small Cap Stocks & providing Small Cap Investor Awareness Programs. Positive Stocks also offers investing tools to help investors make informed decisions about the small cap stocks they are interested in. Follow Positive Stocks for investment news, expert views, insights & commentary. Positive Stocks is a capital market services & financial communications firm based out of San Diego with a proven track record of positively identifying and launching quick-coverage of highly potential small cap & mid cap stocks at an early stage. Meet the CEO's of some of the most ambitious small cap public companies and influencers within and around the industry.https://www.positivestocks.com
Learn about a new emergency pendent, "Silent Beacon", with no monthly costs.Intel intros new mobile chips, 9th Gen Core processors, designed for speed.Nano Dimension talks 3D printer tech, and the future of it.Small Business Week is here: Marc shares some recommended office gear.
Simon Fried is president, chief business office and cofounder of Nano Dimension, a leader in additive manufacturing systems. He speaks about creating buried capacitance and Nano Dimension's new process for mounting components to the sides of printed circuit boards with PCB Chat's Mike Buetow.
Nano Dimension, based in Israel, focuses on 3d printing of electronic circuits, dialectic inks, and non- particle inks. Their 3D printer allows for multi-layer printed circuit boards. This allows the manufacturer to create a functional object with electrical functions. Nano Dimension is rolling out technology that allows you to print, layer by layer, both polymers and metals, to create a functional circuit to precision. With the development of their first 3D printer, the Nano Dragon Fly 2020, electronic industries will now be able to 3D print customized designs and prototypes in less time, possibly eliminating multiple stages of design. Listen, subscribe and rate this podcast to help us bring you more future tech!
Tune in to our latest on Nano Dimension, an Israeli startup researching and developing advanced 3D printed electronics. We spoke to Simon Fried to better understand the world of 3D printing... The post 3D Printing Anyone? appeared first on Philip Stein & Associates.